Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
against Matt’s neck. He could feel the warm rush
of breath against his throat and he swallowed, a
wave of protectiveness so fierce it was almost
debilitating washing over him. He tightened his
arms
around
Kiernan
and
glanced
back
impatiently.
Aidan ran up behind him, throwing open the
door to the back seat. She scooted in and held out
her arms. Matt laid her brother carefully on the
seat, his dark head in her lap. Cautious not to crush
his legs, he slammed the door and climbed in
behind the wheel.
Once the gates opened and he was past the
reporters, Matt made a quick left and sped off
down the dark street. Snowflakes dipped and
swayed, illuminated in the twin beams of the
Bronco’s headlights.
“We can’t go back to the hotel.” Aidan’s voice
sounded loud in the quiet car.
Matt tensed before he glanced into the rearview
mirror. “What do you mean?”
Her eyes were wide and frantic. “You can’t
carry him through the lobby. It would take just one
phone call for him to be swamped by the local
media.”
Matt paused briefly at the corner before he
turned to the right, stepping firmly on the gas. “I
don’t live far,” he said as he navigated the snowy
streets. “We can take him there, if that’s all right
with you?”
“That’s fine.”
He caught the broken expression on her face as
she stared down at her brother. The look in her
eyes made Matt’s breath hitch. “He’ll be okay,
won’t he?”
“He always has been before. But…I’ve never
seen him under quite this far, either.”
Matt’s hands tightened on the steering wheel.
They didn’t speak again for the rest of the drive.
Matt carried Kiernan through the back door of
his house and straight to his bedroom, laying him
gently on the bed. He got a comforter from the
closet and handed it over. Aidan carefully
removed Kiernan’s shoes, covered him and
tenderly brushed the damp hair from his forehead
before sitting next to Kiernan’s hip. Catching his
limp hand between hers, she cradled it near her
chest, rubbing it between her palms as if to warm
it.
“What can I do?” Matt asked, his voice raw.
“I wish I could tell you.”
Matt looked down at his face and felt an
unpleasant clutching sensation in his chest. Kiernan
was so pale, so still. All the animation that made
him seem somehow larger than life was gone, and
in its place was a wan, colorless shadow. Rarely
had anything seemed more wrong.
* * *
they’d been home, the snowfall had grown heavier,
limiting visibility, and was slowly piling up in
drifts. Cars were creeping cautiously down the
street, headlights cutting through the thick spill of
white flakes. Still feeling edgy, he sighed and
wondered how long he should wait before he
forced Aidan to call for medical help. Turning
away from the window, he stilled when he heard
the sound of his bedroom door opening.
Aidan appeared first. She sent Matt a tentative
smile before she turned back, her hands extended.
“I can manage by myself, thanks,” a deep voice
said in exasperation.
Air rushed into Matt’s lungs fully for the first
time since they’d walked in the door.
“I’d feel surer of that if you’d stop staggering
like a drunk,” Aidan replied.
“Oh, shut up,” Kiernan muttered. “It’s not that
bad.”
Aidan took two steps back, still hovering, and
then Kiernan was in the doorway, his black hair
tousled around a face that was still very pale. He
put his hand on the doorframe to steady himself,
and his instability was clear in the hard grip he had
on the molding. He looked up, his eyes finding
Matt’s.
“Hey,” he said.
“Hey, yourself,” Matt said. “You all right?”
Kiernan took another cautious step forward.
“Yeah, I’m fine.” He released the doorframe and
took another step, immediately swaying on his feet.
Matt took a quick step forward but Aidan was
already there, her hand under his arm.
“Yeah, you’re just peachy. I told you to wait a
few minutes.”
“Bitch, bitch, bitch,” Kiernan said, but allowed
her to steady him.
“Can I get you anything?” Matt asked as Aidan
led him to the sofa. “Coffee? Something to drink?”
Kiernan shook his dark head, but Aidan found
his eyes. “He’s going to need food,” she said, her
voice even.
Kiernan shot her an arch look as he settled on
the sofa. “Yes, because we haven’t imposed on his
hospitality enough already.”
“Coming here was his idea,” she said firmly.
“And you need to eat, Kiernan. You know how
hard things like that are on your body. We need to
get some calories into you.”
“I’ve got ice cream.”
Both dark heads turned toward him, twin blue
eyes suddenly making him self-conscious. He was
pretty sure he blushed under the steady regard, and
shoved his hands into his pockets.
“That would be perfect,” Aidan finally said
with a slight smile. Matt nodded and walked
quickly into his kitchen, slapping on the lights and
going straight to a cupboard next to the sink.
He was reaching into his refrigerator when
Aidan appeared in the doorway. She looked at the
distinctive green and brown carton, her lips
twitching into an amused smirk.
“You just happen to have Dreyer’s Thin Mint
ice cream in your freezer?”
“I needed some stuff from the store this morning,
and it sounded good.”
He knew it was lame, even though it was the
truth. He’d been pushing his shopping cart down
the frozen aisle after leaving the precinct, the
desperation of his empty freezer forcing the
shopping expedition, and the carton of ice cream
caught his eye. He’d remembered the obvious joy
with which Kiernan had eaten some, and he’d
thought…he wasn’t sure what he thought. He’d
bought it on impulse, when he was rarely, if ever,
impulsive, and wondered if he’d lost his mind as
he’d shoved it in his freezer.
“Would you like some?” he asked Aidan,
embarrassment preventing him from glancing over.
“No, thanks. I’m fine.”
He opened the carton and spooned a healthy
serving of the thick chocolate ice cream into the
bowl. Adding a spoon, he handed it to her and she
took it with a small, knowing smile. After she left
the room, Matt closed his eyes for a moment in
what he could only identify as mortification.
Clearly, the sister thought something was going on.
He’d gotten that vibe from her almost from the
moment he’d met her.
But there wasn’t. He wasn’t ready for there to
be, not yet, maybe not ever. He returned the ice
cream to the freezer, giving himself a mental shake.
He wasn’t sure why he was so self-conscious. It
was just ice cream.
When he went back into the living room,
Kiernan was eating the ice cream with such
obvious enjoyment Matt almost forgot his
embarrassment. He finished every bite and used
his finger to scoop some of the lingering chocolate
from the side of the bowl, until Aidan made a
disgusted sound and snatched it out of his hands.
“What?” he said, not looking remotely
chastised. “It’s good.”
“You don’t need to lick the bowl. If you want
more I’m sure Matt doesn’t mind if you have
some.”
Kiernan turned his wide eyes to Matt, his face a
youthful mix of humor and entreaty. Matt bit back a
smile.
“That’s fine,” he said, reaching out.
“No, I’ll get it.” Aidan sent Matt a fleeting smile
and went into the kitchen, leaving the two of them
alone.
Kiernan leaned back into the sofa cushions with
a satisfied sigh. Matt settled tentatively on the edge
of a large chair.
“How are you feeling?”
There was a pause. “Better,” Kiernan answered
finally. “That was a really odd experience, though.
I don’t remember ever going quite so far under
before.”
“I should have told you she’d been drugged,”
Matt said, voicing aloud what he’d been thinking
since they’d left the Reynolds’ house. “It never
occurred to me her physical state would be a
factor.”
“And why would it? You didn’t know how it
was going to go down.” Kiernan’s eyes regained
some of their sparkle. “You didn’t think anything
much would happen at all.” Matt didn’t bother to
correct him. He hadn’t voiced his skepticism
aloud, but he had no doubt it was obvious. “And I
seem to remember telling you not to give me too
many details.”
That didn’t stop Matt from feeling responsible,
and guilty because he still wasn’t sure how much
he believed. He stared at his hands, unable to
avoid the mental picture of Kiernan lying on the
cold basement floor, body stiffened and eyes
rolling, slowly choking. It had been like watching
Abby Reynolds die. Matt doubted he’d ever forget
it. If it was an act, it was a damned good one.
Something nudged his knee, bringing him out of
his thoughtful daze. He looked up to find Kiernan’s
sock-clad foot stretched out and touching his leg,
and the other man studying him.
“Knock it off. You didn’t do anything wrong. I
wasn’t in any danger.”
Matt’s expression must have showed his
disbelief.
“I wasn’t,” Kiernan repeated emphatically. “I’d
have passed out and lost the connection and started
breathing spontaneously. I was never in any real
trouble, it just looked like it.”
“You’re right. It looked like it.”
“Hazards of the trade. Ones I accept. Now, let it
go.”
“Do you remember?” Matt asked. “What you
saw?”
A shudder moved over Kiernan’s shoulders.
“All of it.”
“Want to talk about it?”
Aidan returned and handed Kiernan another
bowl of ice cream, and sat close beside him. She
was hovering, but Matt couldn’t blame her.
“That was sort of the point, wasn’t it?” Kiernan
dipped the spoon into the ice cream and shot Matt
an impish look as he shoveled some into his mouth.
“I don’t want to push.”
Kiernan smiled around the spoon. “You’re not
pushing.” He swallowed and loaded the spoon
again. “Ask away.”
Matt paused, gathering his thought. “It was a
man,” he said finally. Kiernan nodded. “And he
covered her eyes?”
“Before she ever woke up. I think it was some
sort of scarf, knotted at the back. It pulled on her
hair.”
Matt tucked the information away. There had
been no evidence of a blindfold. That could mean
one of two things: there hadn’t been one and
Kiernan was full of crap, or the murderer had
taken it with him. Matt was no longer sure which
scenario he thought more likely.
“But she heard his voice.”
“Yeah, but…it was weird. Like he used one of
those electronic voice-altering things.”
Matt narrowed his eyes. “He covered her eyes,
and altered his voice.”
“Which would probably indicate she would at
least recognize him, yes.” Kiernan handed the half-
eaten ice cream to his sister, his appetite
apparently satisfied.
“So, it could have been her father,” Matt mused,
his lips pursed.
“It wasn’t.” He said it emphatically.
“How can you be so sure?”
“She was sure. Look,” Kiernan went on before
Matt could voice his skepticism. “I know this is all
weird to you, to put it mildly. And if you’re like
any of the other five hundred cops I’ve met in my
life, you think I’m either a charlatan or one brick
short of a load. Right?”
“I don’t know what I think,” Matt said. “Three
days ago, I would have agreed with what you just
said unequivocally. Now…”
“Seeing a ghost will do that for you.” Kiernan’s
eyes were level.
“You know, it wasn’t exactly a picnic for him
this afternoon.” Aidan glared at Matt, her voice
tight.
Kiernan put his hand on her thigh without taking