Mo rolled to one side, but kept his right hand clamped on her left arm. With his left hand he yanked the cap off her head, revealing a cloud of silvery hair. She swung hard, slapping him on the jaw and screamed, “Don’t touch me, you sonofabitch!”
Suddenly, the back porch light snapped on, flooding the backyard in a bright yellow glow. “Who’s out there? What’s going on?” It was Hattie.
* * *
The old woman was sitting up now, scowling up at the two of them. She pointed at Mo. “This sonofabitch broke my hip! I will sue the two of you for every penny you’ve got.”
“Mavis? Mavis Creedmore?” Hattie glanced over at Mo. “I don’t understand. What are you doing out here this late?”
“I was waiting for her,” Mo said, pointing at the old lady. “Only I didn’t know it was her. I just figured our arsonist might make a return visit. I’ve been camping out, sleeping in a lawn chair on the front porch, for the past two nights. And sure enough, tonight, she did come back.”
Hattie shook her head. “Come on, let’s get her up and see if she’s hurt.”
“Of course I’m hurt,” Mavis snapped. “This fool tackled me. Knocked me clean off my feet. I could have been killed.”
Hattie and Mo each took an arm and gently hoisted the old woman to her feet.
“Owwww,” she moaned, when she was finally standing upright. She rubbed her bony hips and dusted sand from her baggy black knit pants.
“Mavis,” Hattie said. “Why are you here? What are you up to?”
“I was checking on my house,” Mavis Creedmore said, scowling. “No law against that.”
Mo gave a snort of disbelief. “Checking? At one in the morning? In total darkness?” He pointed his flashlight at a wooden baseball bat lying near the spot where he’d tackled her, and picked it up. “With this?”
“I brought that for protection,” she said. “And if I hadn’t been sneak attacked, I by God would have laid it upside your head.”
“This is not your house anymore, and you know it,” Hattie said, her voice stern. “Your family left it to sit here and rot. And you didn’t pay your property taxes, so the city condemned it and I bought it.”
“That’s a damn lie,” Mavis cried. “Creedmores have owned this house for seventy years. My granddaddy left it to me, and I’ll be damned if I let some pissant little girl like you steal it out from under me.” Her lip curled into a sneer as she addressed Hattie.
“Hattie Bowers. You’re a damned thief. You can change your name all you want, but everybody in this town knows who you are and who you come from. You’re as crooked as a dog’s hind leg, just like that thieving daddy of yours.”
Hattie flinched and was silent for a moment, staring down at the old woman’s loosely laced orthopedic shoes.
When she looked up again her voice was low but steady. “Mavis, I know you’re the one who complained to the city about us. Now you need to get back in your car and drive away from here, right this minute, before I change my mind and turn you over to the police.”
“You’re letting her go?” Mo asked, incredulous. “She’s an arsonist. Criminal trespasser and a vandal. She came out here tonight, probably intending to finish the job she started two nights ago.”
“Arsonist?” the old lady sniffed. She poked a bony finger in Mo’s chest. “If I’d a wanted to burn this house down, buddy, you’d best believe there would be nothing left standing out here. I didn’t set no fire, and you can’t prove I did.”
Mavis snatched the bat from his hand and hobbled toward her car. She turned on the high beams, threw the sedan into reverse, backing over a shovel and a plastic bucket, then sped away down the driveway, kicking up a cloud of sand in her wake.
Hattie sighed. “Tug said this house has bad vibes. Cass said it too. I’m beginning to think maybe they were right.”
“Bullshit,” Mo said. He pointed at the sedan’s red taillights. “Do you believe that old crone? Was she lying when she said she didn’t start the fire?”
“I’m not sure what to think,” Hattie admitted.
“Then, who else?” he asked.
Hattie shivered, despite the heat. Deliberately changing the subject, she lightly touched his jaw, which was already darkening with a bruise. “Did she do that to you?”
“Walloped me a good one,” he said, his expression sheepish. “I’m just glad she dropped her bat when I jumped her.”