Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
worked with police departments before. His name
is Kiernan Fitzpatrick, and…”
Her eyes widened and her mouth fell open. “The
medium?”
It was Matt’s turn to be surprised. “You’ve
heard of him?”
“I’ve seen his program.” She stopped, her hand
squeezing his arm. An almost feverish excitement
animated her pale face. “You think he could
communicate with Abby? Oh.” Tears filled her
eyes. “Oh, Detective. I would pay anything,
anything…”
“This isn’t about money,” he interrupted
quickly. “I met Mr. Fitzpatrick and he…well, he
offered to help, if he can, because he knows
there’s no suspect.”
She shook her head, her eyes hardening. “You
and I both know that isn’t true. They have a
suspect. They’re just wrong.” She dashed angrily
at the dampness beneath her lashes. “As if this
entire thing weren’t nightmare enough, someone
has decided my husband hurt my baby. Well, it
isn’t true.” She sounded fierce. “They don’t know
Marc the way I do. He’s devastated. He didn’t do
this.”
“Then you aren’t opposed to the idea—”
“How soon can he be here?”
“Actually,” Matt said, gesturing sheepishly,
“he’s outside in my car.”
Mrs. Reynolds inhaled sharply. “Now?”
“Yes, ma’am. Right now.”
She looked more engaged than she had since
he’d met her. “Well, please. Invite him in.”
* * *
Karen Reynolds, but kept his hands behind his
back when she offered one of hers.
“Please don’t be offended,” he said gently. “I’m
afraid it might interfere with the reading if I touch
you. I need to try to avoid distraction.”
Karen pulled her hand back quickly. “I can’t tell
you how happy I am to meet you. And so grateful
you could come.”
“Thank you for allowing me into your home.”
He gave her a kind smile. “I was wondering if it
might be possible for me to see your daughter’s
bedroom.”
“Yes, of course. If you could pick up anything,
anything at all, that could help us…just to know my
baby isn’t…really gone. And my husband…” Her
voice caught in her throat and her eyes filled. She
tried to choke back a sob, but was unable to.
Aidan stepped gracefully into the awkward,
painful silence, slipping her arm around Karen’s
narrow shoulders. “Why don’t you and I sit
down?” she said, her voice soothing. “Maybe in a
few minutes I can make you a cup of tea.”
“Oh,” Karen said weakly, making an obvious
effort to pull herself together. “I was hoping I
might…” She gestured toward the stairs.
“It will be easier for him to get a feel for it
without us,” Aidan said. “If there are too many
emotions present, it can muddle what he receives.
But he’ll tell you everything he sees, I promise.”
She rubbed her hand up and down Karen’s upper
arm as she steered her away, glancing back at Matt
and Kiernan meaningfully. They went up the stairs
to the second floor, Aidan’s quiet voice drifting
behind them.
Matt stood near the doorway as Kiernan broke
the crime scene tape and walked carefully into the
lavishly decorated bedroom. He glanced around
with interest. He looked so young, almost like a
college kid on Christmas break instead of a
twenty-seven-year-old man.
Abby Reynolds’ bedroom looked exactly as it
had the last time Matt had seen it. The department
photographer had catalogued it from every angle,
his flash throwing harsh light over the scene. The
bedding was in a bunch near the foot of the bed,
the pink comforter spilling over the cherry
footboard to pool on the beige carpet. The pale
pink sheets were as they had been, the impression
left by Abby’s head still visible in the pillow. Matt
forced his eyes away.
White shelves on one wall held an array of toys
and trophies from dance competitions. The closet
door was open, and Matt could see small dresses
hung neatly and a perfect line of little shoes in an
array of colors. She was a meticulous child, her
mother had explained, a tissue clutched in her fist.
A place for everything and everything in its place.
So much so, if one thing was out of alignment,
she’d have to straighten it before she could sleep.
Matt’s throat thickened. There was so much
personality left behind in her painfully neat
bedroom. How she would hate the bedding tossed
on the floor and the decorative pillows scattered
across the carpet. He fought the urge to make the
bed.
Smudges of powder on the headboard and
windowsill remained where the techs had
unsuccessfully dusted for prints. The CSI team had
been certain the child had been taken directly from
her bed, but whoever had done it had been smart.
The suspect hadn’t left a trace of evidence behind.
Nothing was found in the room, in the hall or in the
basement. All of which, Branson said, led to the
belief that they were dealing with someone who
knew how to circumvent the law.
Someone like her defense attorney father.
Matt didn’t share his conviction. He’d been
standing next to Marc Reynolds when he’d seen his
dead child. He’d been a cop long enough to know
real grief when he saw it. Matt had literally felt the
shudders of pain and horror as they moved through
the attorney’s body. And, unlike Branson, Matt had
a soul-deep understanding of how grief felt, trying
to claw its way out of your chest.
Kiernan moved slowly, his eyes roaming over
the bed and the shelves. He walked toward a large
toy box shaped like a fairy-tale castle, lifting his
left hand, feeling for something in the air. He
closed his eyes, his hand shifting restlessly over a
line of stuffed animals on top of the toy chest. The
long, pale fingers moved gracefully over the plush,
touching a blue teddy bear, a pink pony and a
white unicorn with a rainbow-striped horn.
Matt couldn’t say exactly how he knew
something had changed, but Kiernan’s hand paused
on the unicorn’s head, and the air thickened and
electrified at the same moment. Kiernan’s head
turned sharply as his fingers tightened on the toy.
“Hi, Abby,” he said softly, his lips lifting in a
gentle smile. “You have a very nice bedroom.”
Matt searched the room, the hair lifting on the
back of his neck. He’d been so certain that, if
Abby appeared, he’d see her, too.
“Don’t be offended,” Kiernan said softly. Matt’s
gaze jerked back to find the knowing eyes
watching him. “It takes less energy for her to
appear to me.” He spared Matt a quick wink and
lifted the unicorn from the shelf, turning it in his
hands. “This one? Yeah, I like him. What’s his
name?” He angled his head, listening, and his
smile widened. “It’s a perfect name for a unicorn
with a candy-striped horn.”
Kiernan replaced the toy and walked slowly
toward an empty chair angled before a small
dressing table. He stopped and sat easily on the
floor. Had a small child been seated in the
diminutive chair, he’d have been at their eye level.
“Kiernan,” he said, his eyes beginning to dance.
“I’m not surprised. It’s sort of unusual. It’s Irish.”
He glanced in Matt’s direction. “Matthew, but his
friends call him Matt.” His full lips curved. “I’m
sure he wouldn’t mind at all.”
The heaviness in the air had intensified. Matt
had been so absorbed watching the lithe figure
sitting before the small white chair he hadn’t
noticed until it surrounded him, almost like a
weight lying against his chest. He crossed his
arms, hunching his shoulders as his skin crawled.
Kiernan didn’t seem to notice. There was no
doubt in Matt’s mind he was having a conversation
with the dead child. Or at least, the skeptic inside
him argued, he thought he was.
Kiernan chatted about the trophies on the
shelves, and the dolls in the boxes, and the color of
the walls. He sounded young, so young he might
almost have been Abby’s contemporary. His voice
drifted into a higher register, and suddenly Matt
had very little difficulty imagining him as he must
have been at six—wide-eyed, charming, dimples
appearing near the corners of his mouth when he
smiled. He was so fascinated by the animated one-
sided conversation he was startled when Kiernan’s
eyes shot toward him again.
“I agree with you.” He looked back at the chair
and nodded. “Yeah, he is.” He hesitated. His smile
faded. “He does, Abby, but only if you’re
comfortable talking about it.”
Matt took a step forward, and Kiernan glanced
up at him. “She knows why we’re here, what we
want to talk to her about.”
Matt looked at the chair, trying to visualize the
child’s large eyes. “If it will upset you, Abby,” he
forced himself to say, “we can wait.”
Kiernan made a soft sound. Matt couldn’t say
why it set his senses on cautious alert.
“Yes,” Kiernan said, sounding hesitant, “if it
will be easier for you, I can.”
“What?” Matt asked.
“She’s offering to let me see.”
“What does that mean?”
“She’ll show me what she saw,” Kiernan
answered. “Rather than tell me, she’ll let me see it
from her point of view.”
“Is it safe?”
Kiernan paused, then nodded. “It takes a bit
more energy on my part, that’s all.”
He said it dismissively, but something in his
tone made Matt uncomfortable.
“Kiernan.” Matt was torn. He wanted to see
how this would play out, but he was beginning to
wonder if he wasn’t in over his head. What did he
know about this? He wasn’t sure he believed in
any of it. He wasn’t sure what he believed
anymore, period. But he didn’t want anyone getting
hurt, particularly Kiernan.
Kiernan looked up at him. “You want to know
what happened, right? This is the easiest for her.”
A disarming smile pulled at his lips. “Relax, Matt.
This is my area of expertise, remember?”
Still, Matt wanted to caution him. There was
something in Kiernan’s eyes, the stiffened way he
was sitting. But he was right, it wasn’t Matt’s area.
“Whatever
works
for
you,”
Matt
said
reluctantly.
Kiernan settled himself more comfortably on the
floor, legs crossed beneath him, hands on his
knees. “Okay, Abby,” he murmured, taking a deep
breath and closing his eyes. “Show me.”
The hair on the back of Matt’s neck twitched
uncomfortably. The eerie heaviness in the room
was a tangible thing, and the faint buzzing of what
felt like an electrical current crawled along his
arms.
Kiernan’s long black lashes were lying against
his pale cheeks, and his head lolled forward. He
breathed deeply, steadily, for several minutes and
the silence around them thickened. Matt wondered
if he’d fallen asleep when Kiernan stiffened with
an audible sound of surprise.
“There’s someone,” he said, and his voice was
completely different. He sounded…like a little
girl, Matt realized with a start. “I can’t see their
face. There’s something over my eyes.” Kiernan’s
hand lifted to his face, feeling over his eyes.
“They’re breathing really, really loud. I wake up,
but I can’t see. There’s someone here, in my room.
I’m scared.” Kiernan’s lower lip started to
tremble. “They don’t belong here. I start to call for
Mommy, but a hand is over my mouth. They’re
wearing something on it, something slimy.”
Matt
swallowed.
Rubber
gloves.
The
investigators figured the murderer had been
wearing protective gloves, but this was like having
it confirmed. By the victim.
“I don’t like the way it feels on my face. He tells
me to be still. I can tell it’s a man. He smells
funny. Sweet, like candy.” Kiernan whimpered.
“He’s scaring me. Why is he in my room? I want
my daddy. Where is Daddy?”
Matt bit his lip when Kiernan moved his head,
struggling to pull away from unseen hands. A