Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
his head lowered, handsome face contemplative.
Matt couldn’t help but wonder how all this seemed
to him, with his intimate knowledge of what came
next. What could a minister who spoke about
“God’s mansion having many rooms” have to say
to a man who could speak to the dead and knew the
pertinent details of what came next firsthand?
There was another song, another singer. Another
relative who spoke fondly of Abby, and her
mother’s weeping became audible. She wasn’t the
only one crying. The sanctuary was filled with the
muffled
sounds
of
grief.
Matt
fidgeted
uncomfortably, beginning to regret his decision to
attend. He wanted to support Karen Reynolds, but
this long sad goodbye was almost more than he
could stand.
Involuntarily he recalled the green grass he’d
stared at instead of Brad’s flag-draped coffin,
remembered the words that had rung hollow to him
even then. The minister hadn’t known Brad. He
hadn’t known he was funny, and pragmatic, and
surprisingly gentle for a career cop. He hadn’t
known he loved Bud Light and the Dallas
Cowboys and his burgers medium rare. He hadn’t
known Brad was a cuddler, and that his secret
passion was fussy little frosted cakes Matt would
pick up at their local bakery. Matt teased him,
saying eating them was the gayest thing he did. The
minister hadn’t known how much he loved, or was
loved, and the lack made his funeral an empty and
torturous exercise in futility. Matt’s throat began to
close and his eyes to sting, and he stiffened, trying
to fight his emotions back with a surge of panic.
His hand curled into a fist next to his thigh.
A warm palm settled over the top of it, and
surprisingly soft fingers rubbed his knuckles. Matt
glanced to the side into wide eyes studying him in
complete understanding.
“Relax,” Kiernan mouthed, his lips scarcely
moving, but Matt could read the words. “It’s
almost over.”
He continued to look into the warm gaze as he
forced his fingers to unfold, pressing his hand flat
against the wooden pew. Kiernan laid his palm on
top of it, squeezed, and then pulled both his hand
and his gaze away. Matt was both relieved and
surprised by how the gesture seemed to steady him
and he exhaled gratefully.
Moments later the same fingers clamped tight
around his wrist. Kiernan was staring straight
ahead, his mouth slightly open and his eyes
unnaturally wide. The warmth in his expression
had leached away, reminding Matt eerily of how
he’d looked in Abby Reynolds’ bedroom. He
leaned close.
“Kiernan,” Matt whispered. “What is it?”
“He’s here,” he said, his lips scarcely moving.
“Who?” Another eulogy went on in the
background, but neither of them noticed. “Who’s
here?”
“He is,” Kiernan repeated and turned to look at
Matt. Their faces were inches apart, and his pupils
had dilated to tiny dots in the centers of vivid blue.
“
He
is.”
Matt stiffened as the meaning sank in. “How do
you know?”
“Abby just told me.”
“She’s here?”
Kiernan nodded toward the center aisle. Slowly,
Matt turned to look.
There was no little girl with blond curls
standing at the end of their pew, at least not that
Matt could see. But an ice-cold breeze slithered
across his cheek like the brush of small, cold
fingers.
Chapter Eight
“He frightens her,” Kiernan said as Matt drove
through the snowy streets. “She’s been staying
close to her mother, but when she sensed him
there, she only remained long enough to warn us,
and then she was gone.”
Matt scowled, taking another corner, slowing as
his tires spun for a moment over the ice beneath the
new
layer
of
snow
that
was
currently
accumulating. He handled the minor skid with ease
and stepped on the gas again. “She didn’t see him
when he killed her,” he said, unable to hide his
natural skepticism. “How did she know who he
was?”
“She could smell him. Butterscotch.”
“Lots of people like butterscotch candies.”
“Name one.”
Matt opened his mouth to answer but he didn’t
actually know anyone who sucked on hard
butterscotch candies.
“See?” Kiernan said. “Not so common.”
“But there were at least three hundred people in
church. How are we supposed to know which one
she meant?”
“We know it was someone sitting fairly close to
Karen.”
“Which means any one of two dozen people.”
“At least we can narrow it down.” Kiernan
chewed thoughtfully at his lower lip.
Matt tried to remember who’d been seated in the
pew in front of them in the cavernous church.
“Yeah, to her father and members of their
immediate family,” he muttered. “Oh, and the
police commissioner, captain of detectives and
assistant district attorney. This seems pretty far-
fetched as a way of narrowing in on a murder
suspect.”
“I know it’s not much. Maybe she went back to
the house. I know she feels safest there. If I can get
up to her bedroom and talk to her, I might be able
to get more information. If she could stay around
long enough to give me even a bit more about
where he was sitting.” He exhaled roughly. “It’s
that she’s so afraid of him…”
Matt’s hands gripped the steering wheel so hard
the plastic dug into his palms. In his peripheral
vision he saw Kiernan turn his head, and felt his
eyes on him.
“What?” Kiernan asked. Matt shook his head in
an abrupt motion. “Come on. What?”
Matt’s jaw hardened. “He’s done the worst he
can to her. Doesn’t she understand that?”
“Not
really.
Most
people
don’t
have
conversations about death with their six-year-old.
It’s not something they want to acknowledge is a
possibility. So children go into it pretty woefully
misinformed. They don’t understand what’s
happened to them.”
“You’re telling me Abby doesn’t know she’s
dead.” The thought made him feel ill.
“She knows something is wrong,” Kiernan
qualified. “But no. Not really.”
Matt stared bleakly through the falling snow.
“Christ. I thought there was supposed to be a light
or something. Someone to meet you, to guide you
over. Loved ones who’d gone before. Is it all
crap?”
A steady, calming hand rested on his thigh, pale
fingers spread. “It isn’t crap. There is something
more, something greater. It’s different for
everyone. Some people travel through a long
tunnel, others open their eyes and find themselves
in a meadow of flowers. Some are surrounded by
family, some aren’t. It’s as individual as the
person. But I told you, there’s still choice. Choice
to go forward, or to stay where at least things look
familiar. Now, imagine you’re six years old, you
have no idea what’s going on, and suddenly there’s
this long, dark tunnel and at the other end you hear
someone calling you. Would you go?”
Matt frowned but didn’t answer.
“On top of that, she was compromised when she
died. The drugs made everything fuzzy. It’s a lousy
situation all around.”
Matt’s mouth tightened as he bit the inside of his
lip.
“What?” Kiernan prodded again. “Come on,
Matt.” He squeezed the rigid muscle in Matt’s
thigh. “Talk to me.”
“I hate the idea she might actually still be
afraid,” he answered harshly. “She shouldn’t have
to be, it shouldn’t be like that.”
“I know. And I know all of this challenges
something fundamental in your belief system.”
Matt shot him a narrow-eyed look.
Kiernan’s mouth softened in response. “You’re
a cop, raised a Catholic. Both things are conducive
to a healthy skepticism. It’s okay, I understand. But
people are complicated, Matt, which means their
deaths are complicated, too. People who have
reached an advanced age and die peacefully have a
certain death experience. You have to grant that
murder victims, particularly children, might have
another. But I can talk to her. It’s what I do,
remember?”
Matt nodded grudgingly.
“If I didn’t think I could help, I wouldn’t be
here. If I can contact her, and can get her to listen
long enough, I can convince her he can’t hurt her
anymore. I’m going to try.”
Matt took a deep breath, releasing it slowly.
Kiernan’s hand drifted away from his thigh, and
Matt missed the warmth of it almost instantly. He
turned another corner and slowed at the sight in
front of him.
“Son of a bitch,” he growled, eying the rows of
news vans blocking the street in front of the
Reynolds’ house. Traffic was backed up and
crawling. He glanced in the rearview mirror
before throwing the Bronco into a tight U-turn. It
took the wheels a moment to find purchase on the
packed snow, but the studs finally caught and
jerked the vehicle around. “There won’t be any
going in the back way here. But if we park far
enough away…” He turned down a side street,
pulling to the curb about a block from the corner.
“We’re going to have to hoof it,” he said, turning
off the ignition. “There’s a hat on the back seat and
a scarf in the trunk. We might be able to cover up
enough of your face to get by without them figuring
it out.”
“Wait, I get to wear a disguise?” Brightening,
Kiernan peered over the seat and scooped up the
ball cap. When he yanked it onto his head, it was
large enough that it covered the top of his ears and
his forehead almost to his eyebrows. “Cool!”
“What are you, twelve?”
Kiernan laughed. “I have been accused of acting
it more than once.”
Matt opened his door and snow blew into his
face. God, it was cold. He hoped it worked in their
favor. Many of the people arriving at the house
would be bundled up and unrecognizable. He
turned the collar of his overcoat up around his chin
and trudged through the thick snow to the back of
the Bronco, unlocking the hatch, lifting it to
rummage around. He found the plaid scarf under a
blanket and tossed it to Kiernan. “Wrap that
around the lower part of your face and tuck the
ends inside your coat.”
Kiernan caught it with a playful grin, unfolding
the long piece of fleece. It was nearly as long as he
was tall, and he eyed it with skepticism.
“You don’t wear scarves where you’re from?”
“In southern California? No, not ordinarily.”
Matt stepped up next to him on the snow-
shrouded curb. “Give me that,” he said gruffly,
holding out his hand. Kiernan handed it over and
Matt quickly doubled it, folding it back on itself.
“Okay, open your jacket for a second.”
Kiernan dutifully unbuttoned the leather coat and
held it open.
A gust of cold plastered the fabric of Kiernan’s
dress shirt to his chest, and his nipples hardened
abruptly into sharp points. The sight of them sent a
startling rush of tingling awareness over Matt’s
body, centering in his groin.
Matt hastily wrapped the scarf around Kiernan’s
throat and forced himself to take a step back. But
his hands actually ached with the desire to touch,
and he curled them into fists inside his gloves.
“Is this what you meant?”
Kiernan had effectively covered the distinctive
square jaw and expressive mouth and the hat did
the rest. Someone would have to look closely to
recognize him. Matt nodded brusquely and turned
to head toward the Reynolds’ house and Kiernan
fell into step beside him, thankfully silent. Matt
wasn’t sure he’d be able to carry on a
conversation. He felt like an idiot. An aroused
idiot, because the inconvenient ache still lingered
in his groin.
As they neared the house, they joined the crowd
gathering outside on the sidewalk. There were
dozens of people in front of them. Private security