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Hidden Fitz: Fracktown Gumshoe, #7
Hidden Fitz: Fracktown Gumshoe, #7
Hidden Fitz: Fracktown Gumshoe, #7
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Hidden Fitz: Fracktown Gumshoe, #7

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When a young university student Phillipa Huddleston sits down in the office of Fitzhugh investigation, she wants Fitz to find her mother, Barbara Huddleston. The problem? She's been gone for four years and the police were never notified. Why wouldn't her father report his wife missing? Had he killed her? Or why didn't Pippa's wealthy grandparents do the same?

 

The case takes Fitz out of the familiar environs of his hometown, Fawcettville, to New Tunstall, a small town on the Ohio River filled with secrets. Once the center of the country's pottery business, New Tunstall now struggles with unemployment, opioids and poverty. With no familiar sources, Fitz must turn to two unlikely allies to help him solve his case.

 

This is the seventh in Debra Gaskill's award-winning Fracktown Gumshoe series.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherDebra Gaskill
Release dateApr 4, 2022
ISBN9798201047719
Hidden Fitz: Fracktown Gumshoe, #7
Author

Debra Gaskill

Debra Gaskill is the former managing editor of the Washington Court House (Ohio) Record Herald, which earned two Associated Press General Excellence awards during her tenure. She was an award-winning journalist for 20 years, writing for a number of Ohio newspapers covering the cops and courts beat, and the Associated Press, covering any stories thrown her way. Gaskill brings her knowledge of newspapers to her Jubilant Falls series. The mysteries 'Barn Burner' (2009), 'The Major's Wife' (2010), 'Lethal Little Lies' (2013), 'Murder on the Lunatic Fringe' (2014) and 'Death of A High Maintenance Blonde' (2014) all center around crimes committed in the fictional small town Jubilant Falls, Ohio, and often center around the damage family secrets can do. 'The Major's Wife' received honorable mention in the 2011 Writer's Digest Self-Published Book Awards and 'Barn Burner' was a finalist for the Silver Falchion Award at Killer Nashville.. Her next series, featuring the private investigator Niccolo Fitzhugh, brings her cops and courts experience together in a mystery that "creates complex characters and places them in real settings" according to customer reviews. That series includes Call Fitz (2015), Holy Fitz (2016), Love Fitz (2016), and the 2018 Silver Falchion Award winner for Best Suspense, Kissing Fitz (2017). Gaskill has an associates degree in liberal arts from Thomas Nelson Community College in Hampton, Va., a bachelor's degree in English and journalism from Wittenberg University and a master of fine arts in creative writing from Antioch University, Yellow Springs. She and her husband Greg, a retired U.S. Air Force Lieutenant Colonel, have two children and three grandchildren. They raise llamas and alpacas on their farm in Enon, Ohio. Connect with her on her website, www.debragaskillnovels.com, as well as on Twitter and Facebook.

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    Book preview

    Hidden Fitz - Debra Gaskill

    Chapter 1

    M r. Fitzhugh, I need your help.

    It was Friday, about an hour before closing when she came into the office.

    Call me Fitz. What can I do for you? I tried to be polite, but I was counting the minutes until I could lock this place up and head home.

    The girl sitting in front of me wiped her eyes demurely and nodded, her cheeks reddening. OK, she wasn’t a girl. She was a young woman—Alicia would have smacked me if I’d called any female above age fifteen a girl. This young woman in front of me dressed well, expensively, like a sorority girl. Like a lot of the spoiled rich kids attending the college here in Fawcettville. Her skin was porcelain and her dark blonde hair hung in curls to her shoulders. Her eyes were brown, and her legs were great.

    Fitz. She was silent for a second, uncomfortable with the reason she now sat in my office. I need you to find my mother.

    I need to know your name first.

    Oh. Yes. It’s Phillipa, Phillipa Huddleston. My friends call me Pippa.

    Well, Pippa, how long has your mother been missing?

    Four years.

    I raised my eyebrows.

    Do the police know?

    No. She shook her head.

    Why not?

    Because we never told them. My father told me she was hospitalized. She’s bipolar.

    Did you ever visit her?

    Pippa shook her head.

    Dad said she didn’t want to see me.

    I nodded. Not a surprise—dysfunctional family dynamics were my specialty. I’d built my entire PI business on it.

    Why not?

    We had a fight the night before I left for college. She said she never wanted to see me again. I came home for Thanksgiving, and she wasn’t at home. Dad said she was still hospitalized and wasn’t taking visitors. At Christmas break, he said the same thing.

    You didn’t think that was odd?

    The girl shrugged.

    My mom can hold a grudge. She went the whole summer between my freshman and sophomore year of high school without saying a word to me over a boy I went out with once.

    I nodded. I wasn’t surprised. Again, dysfunctional family dynamics were my specialty.

    Then what happened?

    After I finished my freshman year on campus, I got a summer job on campus and didn’t come home again until the next Christmas. She wasn’t home then, but Dad said she wasn’t hospitalized in town anymore either.

    Did he say where she was?

    He said her doctor transferred her to the state hospital in Columbus. So, after I went back for winter semester, I drove from campus to visit her. She wasn’t there. She’d never been there.

    And you just stopped looking?

    No. I mean, well, I didn’t try very hard after that.

    I would have asked your father some serious questions.

    Oh, I did. He admitted the truth to me then, that she’d just left, and he didn’t know where she went.

    Did you call the coroner? The hospitals?

    Pippa shook her head.

    You never made any phone calls just to check in with your folks? Did your folks ever call you?

    Dad called me every now and again, but it wasn’t, you know, weekly or anything. We’ve never been a real close family.

    I clasped my hands together and rested my chin on them. I couldn’t imagine not speaking to my six siblings on a regular basis—at least once a week. My bullshit meter began to tick.

    If you’ve never been close, then why is it suddenly so important?

    I’m graduating from college at the end of the quarter. I want to know where she is. If she’s alive, I’d like her to see me get my diploma.

    You go to college here in town? I asked.

    No. I’m graduating from Ohio University. I’ll have a degree in communications.

    That’s a long way back home to Fawcettville.

    Oh, I’m not from here.

    Where are you from?

    I’m from New Tunstall.

    New Tunstall was south of Fawcettville by about one hundred miles and hung on a bend on the Ohio River’s rocky shores across from West Virginia. Like Fawcettville, it found its initial fame as a home for immigrants who worked the large industry there, in this case, potteries. Unlike Fawcettville, with our Italians, Irish, Poles and Hungarians, mainly British and Welsh immigrants populated this little burg, named for the same pottery-producing town in England. Also, unlike F-town, which tied its fortunes to the American steel business and lost, New Tunstall still produced a large percentage of the country’s dinnerware. There were jobs in New Tunstall. Which meant there was money. And, from the looks of her, the young woman sitting in front of me had some. Maybe even a lot.

    Does your mother have any connection to Fawcettville?

    No.

    Your father?

    No. I figured you’d come to New Tunstall to investigate.

    I blinked, surprised.

    My services don’t come cheap. I get five hundred a day plus expenses. If I come to New Tunstall, there would be hotels, meals, not to mention mileage. How does a college student like you plan on paying for that?

    Pippa shrugged. I have some money left in my college fund.

    This could run into several thousands of dollars within a couple days.

    I know. Her confidence told me she wasn’t the type of kid who ever had to do without. But why was Pippa Huddleston in Fawcettville? It made no sense.

    How did you get my name?

    "From my old boss. She’s the editor of the New Tunstall Record. I worked there as an intern for a couple summers. She gave me your name. She told me you were the best in the business. If anybody could find my mom, she said you could."

    Who’s your boss?

    Bobbie. Bobbie Hanrahan.

    I sank back in my chair, winded like a sacked quarterback.

    The last time I’d talked to Bobbie Hanrahan was twenty-five years ago, maybe more, when I still walked the beat as a cop.

    Back then, she was the Fawcettville Times crime reporter, a Harley-riding woman I met at one of the cop bars after my shift. We got drunk and I went home with her—more than once. Bobbie hadn’t been at the Times very long and didn’t know a lot about me—or the woman who was then my fiancée.

    At that time in my life, I wasn’t known for my fidelity.

    When Fiona caught me in the sack with Bobbie, she fired her two-carat engagement ring at my face like a one hundred mile an hour fastball. A very accurate fastball. I still have the scar across my nose. Then, Bobbie called me a horny Rottweiler who’d hump anything from a Shih Tzu to a hole in a tree, and a pig whose lack of commitment spread deep down into my DNA.

    Bobbie was always good with words, that’s for sure. I couldn’t manage anything more creative than to call her a fucking crazy, workaholic badge bunny.

    Yeah, if there was ever a woman whose name I never wanted to hear again, it was Bobbie Hanrahan. I tried not to roll my eyes as I continued the interview.

    So, if you worked summers for Bobbie, where did you live? At home?

    No. I’ve lived with my grandmother for a couple years now—at least in the summers. During school, I live in the Zeta Omega sorority house. Grandma’s getting a little frail and it seemed the right thing to do.

    The right thing to do? The words struck me as odd.

    How often do you see your father then?

    Pippa shrugged. Not often. He travels a lot with his job.

    So that means?

    She shrugged again.

    We talk maybe once a month or so, usually by phone. I’ll see him on holidays or occasionally in the summers when I’m at Gram’s.

    Who lives with your grandmother when you’re not there? Your father?

    Pippa shook her head. She has a senior aide come in daily. It saves her money when I stay with her in the summers. She’s never liked my dad.

    So, she’s your mother’s mother?

    Yes.

    Is she concerned that your mother has been missing for four years?

    Pippa considered her answer before speaking.

    Yes. She thinks Dad killed her.

    And you don’t think there could be anything to that?

    Dad wouldn’t do that. Grandma has dementia. It’s probably something she came up with in her head. Pippa smiled her shy smile.

    Any good detective always looks at the family first. That’s certainly where I’d start.

    Pippa knit her perfectly arched eyebrows together. You would?

    Yes. I would. You have to rule out everyone close to the victim before looking at anything else.

    Oh. OK.

    You don’t like that answer?

    No, it’s just that... Pippa dropped the nice sorority girl act. Look, Fitz. My mother was an awful person. She wasn’t stable either. She had trouble with pills and booze and got arrested. A lot. We didn’t go to the police because they’re corrupt. The police, the courts and most of the lawyers in New Tunstall—you can’t trust any of them. But Bobbie said I could trust you and that’s why I’m here.

    Chapter 2

    Itook most of the following Monday to dig up whatever I could on New Tunstall and Pippa’s mother via the internet. The town didn’t look a whole lot different than Fawcettville, honestly, at least in photos. There was the familiar downtown that was slowly coming back from the economic devastation of the seventies and eighties, filling up again with coffee shops, cell phone franchises and boutiques.

    They needed it. America’s view of this eastern Ohio town was formed when a police body camera caught two parents overdosed on heroin in a minivan while their toddler son played in his car seat in the back. The photo was posted on social media and soon went viral, opening it to a thousand editorial columns and tanking the town’s reputation.

    Still, there was a lot that reminded me of Fawcettville. The neighborhoods were as familiar as my hometown Italian enclave, New Tivoli, with clapboard houses and brick streets hanging onto the steep hillsides that led down to the Ohio River.

    I also did a lot of digging on Pippa’s mother, Barbara Porter Huddleston. I found the arrests that Pippa told me about: the public intoxication charges (alcohol and opioids), the drunk driving. About the time she disappeared, she was also facing a couple prostitution charges. There was a bench warrant for her for failure to appear on that charge, issued about the time she disappeared.

    Digging through online newspaper archives, I also found an article from the late 1990’s about Barbara’s debutante ball.

    Debutante ball? I thought to myself. Who the fuck still does that? La-di-fucking-dah.

    There was a short notice when she graduated from Boston College, then a few months after that, an extensive engagement announcement to a Yalie named Sumner something—no doubt, the blue-ribbon life choice Barbara’s parents wanted her to make. The engagement announcement implied his parents were from good old Connecticut stock. He had a business degree and would go to work in his father’s investment firm in New York City, the article said. The wedding would be a Christmas one, held at the Porter estate.

    Two months later, a terse announcement appeared on the lifestyle pages: Mr. and Mrs. Shadwell Porter announce the March 17 marriage to their daughter Barbara Ann, to Mr. Glen Huddleston, in Las Vegas.

    No wonder Grandma didn’t like Pippa’s dad.

    When I knew I couldn’t do any more investigating online, it was time to pack up and hit the road to New Tunstall. I told Alicia of my plans at breakfast Tuesday.

    You better come home on weekends. My wife Alicia looked over her coffee mug and winked at me. Or I’m taking up with the pool boy.

    We don’t have a pool.

    I gestured toward the back door and the wooden privacy fence that separated our yard from the alley in our New Tivoli neighborhood. Except for a four-year hitch in the Air Force, and the few precious years in University Heights with my late wife Gracie, I’d lived in this neighborhood most of my life. Our house was a few blocks from four of my six siblings and their families and a few more from the Fitzhugh family home where we’d all grown up. We were the only micks in a sea of wops—my Italian mother, Maria Gallione Fitzhugh, insisted we live among her people.

    Details. Alicia winked again at me. It felt good to be back on solid ground after the last horrible year and the loss of our son. Therapy helped a lot too. While we felt good enough to stop the couples therapy, I still sat in the overstuffed chair at Doc Piccolini’s office at least once a month. It helped.

    I should be able to find what happened to my client’s mother pretty quickly, I said, finishing my own coffee and setting the cup in the sink. I'll bet I’m home by Friday.

    Alicia finished her breakfast and sat her dishes in the sink beside mine. She put her arms around my neck and kissed me.

    I’ll be waiting for you, she whispered and smiled devilishly at me.

    I sure hope so. I kissed her like I’d never see her again, picked up my suitcase and left.

    New Tunstall was a couple hours south of Fawcettville, down a winding State Route 7 that skirted the shores of the Ohio River.

    Outside of town, I passed large historic estates, no doubt built by Gilded Age pottery barons. They sat at the end of long paved lanes over arched with trees and fenced off from us poor working stiffs.

    I pulled in at the bottom of the driveway of one place that caught my eye. The drive itself wasn’t gated off, unlike its Tudor-style neighbor about a mile up the road. This drive, gracefully edged with perfectly trimmed hedges, wound around up to the large house that was somewhere between a castle and a cathedral.

    The stone structure was long, with turrets at each corner and a sharply angled roof. Beneath stone arches along the ground floor, large leaded windows sparkled in the sun. Every now and again, I caught a glimpse of heavy red velvet curtains. The second-floor windows were small, out of proportion and shut tight. They reminded me of the windows in the jail back in Fawcettville.

    The analogy was fitting. I knew a lot of people imprisoned by their money and all the things that came with it. I'd handled their messy divorces, searched for their missing idiot kids, and caught their errant spouses in places they shouldn’t have been.

    It was my job.

    Money like this never grew in Fawcettville, even in the steel industry’s heyday, but there was one thing everyone in both cities had in common: they were all miserable in their own way.

    As I neared the edge of New Tunstall, I got another starker vision, of the divide between the haves and have nots, not the sanitized one I’d clicked through while searching on the web, but the poverty, the drugs and the pain that led to those overdosed parents in the van. Clapboard houses hung precariously to their small lots, leaning against each other like drunks. The tiny, steep front yards dropped off onto cracked and broken sidewalks. A few houses showed pride of place, but they were few and far between. This was where the photo of the overdosed parents had come from.

    A few blocks further, houses were replaced by equally haggard commercial brick buildings. Rag-tag businesses filled some of the storefronts, but many were empty. Empty lots were framed with panels of chain link fencing, trapping discarded paper and bottles along the sidewalks. Men and women with hollow eyes and scabbed faces, sharing the contents of a brown paper bag, stared at me as I drove past.

    Behind me, a police cruiser followed closely. I didn’t think twice about it—an out-of-town vehicle in this shady neighborhood probably meant someone in search of a cheap high. Just a cop doing his job.

    Toward the center of town, things began to improve. New Tunstall, like Fawcettville, had its Union soldier statue in the town square, but unlike my hometown, this statue was framed by monuments to others lost in later conflicts. My hotel, the Bristol Inn, was small, fairly new and faced the monument. The buildings around the square weren’t new but they were shiny, brought back to their restored glory.

    The cruiser peeled off down another street as I came to a stop in front of the hotel.

    Once inside, the lobby was neat, clean, and bland. The desk clerk, his smile pasted on his face, checked me in and followed with a recitation of what the hotel had to offer: a free breakfast buffet, a manager's reception each evening with a wide wine selection, a restaurant which offered dinner throughout the week and lunch on the weekends. To me, the place spoke of cold scrambled eggs behind a sneeze guard, watered down booze and steaks cooked beyond shoe leather. That didn’t matter. I wasn’t going to be here long anyway.

    I got off the elevator and headed to my room, which was on the top floor and faced the street. My suitcase hit the floor, echoing around the dark space. I flipped on the light to see the room wasn’t a whole lot different than the lobby: clean, but bland. A micro-fridge sat next to the dresser, which served as the stand for the flat-screen television. Beyond that, a minimalist workstation sat with a decent office chair.

    Not bad for a week’s stay, I said to no one in particular.

    I stepped to the window and pulled back the sheer curtains to get a look at the downtown. From this view, five streets came together at the monument, each

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