The Hangman (Forgotten Files Book 3)

“Her autopsy revealed she was pregnant. Maybe this was all about the baby.”


Wendy frowned. “I didn’t know about the baby.”

Rita had been nearly twenty weeks along and had hidden her pregnancy. Julia didn’t speak, sensing Wendy had more to tell.

Wendy rubbed her hand over the back of her neck. “Rita knew Jim and Amy were struggling. They’d never really had a traditional marriage, and they were discovering it was harder than they thought to live a normal life. Rita wanted Jim to herself. She was fun and so exciting. And she was good at twisting him around her finger. He was such a fool. There were times I thought she took the job at Billy’s just to be close to Jim.”

“Did he remember her from his undercover days?”

“With a body like that, do you think any man would have forgotten her?”

So Rita had intentionally come back into Jim’s life? “Rita told all her friends she had a boyfriend named Jack. Is that true?” Julia asked.

“If Jack was actually real, I never saw him.” She touched her fingers to her temple. “When Ken told me Jim was dead, Rita was the first person I thought of.”

“Why?”

“She didn’t like hearing no. I could picture her losing her temper. Ken went to look for her, but she had vanished.”

“So who killed her?”




Julia stood on the street in front of the house where Rita Gallagher’s body had been found a week ago. Yellow crime-scene tape was strung across a rotting wooden front door. The floor-to-ceiling windows by the door had been broken by the fire department and were now boarded up with plywood. Several signs planted across the front lawn warned that this house was an active crime scene and not to be entered.

“What was your angle, Rita?” Rita, like Jim, had known the Hangman victims. Had she taken the job at Billy’s to meet Jim and perhaps be close to the other victims? “Was it your job to lead those women to the Hangman? Did Jim figure out what you were doing? Did you kill him?”

Across the street, a door creaked open and then shut. Julia turned to see an old woman easing herself into a chair on her front porch. The woman waved her over.

Glancing both ways, she crossed the street and stopped at the base of the concrete steps. Rows of potted plants were crammed on the front porch around the woman’s chair. Once painted a fresh white, the porch had grayed and chipped, and the Astroturf that covered the cement front steps curled up at the edges. A security door covered the historic wooden door. Bars protected the first-floor windows.

“Yes, ma’am.”

“You’re police.”

“Yes, ma’am. Agent Julia Vargas with Virginia State Police.”

“Etta Greene.” She adjusted her glasses and squinted. “You’re here about that body the police found the other day?”

“I am.”

“Thought so. You have that look.”

Julia smiled. “I’ll take that as a compliment.”

“You have an air about you. Like you’re in charge.”

Julia nodded. “What can I do for you?”

“The cops came by the other day and were knocking on doors and asking questions. I wasn’t here, but I still have the card from Detective Novak.”

“He and I are working the case and need all the help we can get. How long have you been in this house, Mrs. Greene?”

“Seventy years. My folks moved here when I was a child.”

“That’s saying a lot. I bet you’ve seen some changes in this area.”

She picked at the folds of a white crocheted shawl. “It was a nice place when we moved in. A real community. And then the area went downhill bad and stayed down for the longest time.”

“I never policed this area when I was in uniform, but I heard stories. Happy to see the new development coming back.”

“And young families. We’re getting more and more young families.” She adjusted the folds of a thick purple housecoat. “It’s good to hear the laughter of children again.”

Julia glanced at the house across the street. “You heard about what we found in that house the other day?”

“I arrived home from my grandson’s this afternoon, but I heard.”

“We think the woman found in that house died about twenty-five years ago.”

“The early nineties,” she said, more to herself. “I remember that time. My mother was real sick, so I had to quit my job for a time and was home a good bit.”

Julia rested her hand on her hip. “You remember what was going on with that house at the time?”

“Like a lot of houses on this block, it was home to druggies and homeless people. Some of those houses closer to the river were getting fixed up, but not this street. It was rough. I didn’t dare go out at night. Mr. William Delany owned that house in the early nineties, and after he died he left it to his son. I saw the son, Marcus, a lot. Came and went around the clock. He’d show up at odd hours. Carrying boxes. Had a redheaded girl with him all the time. Often, there was another man with him, but I didn’t catch his name or his face.”

“That’s a good memory. You remember the woman?”

“Pretty. Big laugh. Big chest.” She sniffed. “I never spoke to the woman, but I didn’t like Delany. He was rude and left his trash in the yard. Made me so mad I would go over and pick it up.”

“You happen to catch the name of the girl he was with?”

“No.”

“You remember what she looked like?”

“It was usually dark and hard to see, but the one I remember wasn’t a big woman. A white girl.”

Julia pulled her phone and found Rita’s picture. “How about this woman?”

Mrs. Greene took the phone, squinting. “Make the picture bigger.”

Julia swiped the image with her fingers and enlarged Rita’s face.

“Got great-grandkids who have phones like that. They’re always looking at it rather than playing outside. They type messages, snap pictures, and play games. Don’t think anyone talks on ’em. My phone is attached to the wall, where it should be.” She studied the image while adjusting her glasses. “Can’t say for sure if it was her. But this one reminds me of that woman.”

“I’m still amazed you remember back so far. Twenty-five years is a long time.” She wasn’t questioning her honesty, but the story of the body had been in the paper, and memories, though helpful, weren’t always reliable.

“I remember them real well because the last time I saw them together was the night my mama died. The ambulance came, and I was so upset. And then I heard that woman cackle as she and Mr. Delany staggered into the house. They saw the damn ambulance taking my mama away, but they didn’t stop to give their respects. Some moments stick hard in your memory.”

“You’re sure it was Marcus Delany? I understand he had a guy living in the house.” She flipped through her notes. “The guy’s name was Scott Turner.”

“No one else lived in that house but the younger Mr. Delany. The others came and went.”