Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
“And I don’t want to jam you up.”
“I appreciate it.”
“But I need some information.”
There was another pause. “Could you hold for
one minute, please?”
Matt heard a click in his ear, returning him to
tinny Christmas music.
“What did he say?” Kiernan asked.
“He put me on hold.”
“Hey, at least he didn’t hang up in your ear.”
“True.” Matt slumped back into the sofa,
determined to wait. But as more time ticked by and
Ed didn’t return, Matt started to think he’d been
brushed off. He waited ten minutes and was about
to hang up when the line clicked again.
“Listen, I can’t talk for long,” Ed said, his voice
hushed. “The entire department has been given
very clear instructions not to speak to you, but—
I’ve been a cop too damned long, Matt. Something
about this whole thing stinks to high heaven.”
Matt sat up, feeling Kiernan’s eyes on him.
“What do you mean?”
“I can’t discuss it here, and I’d rather not do it
on my cell.” His voice dropped even further. “Cell
records leave a paper trail, and if there’s any kind
of an internal investigation, they’ll subpoena
them.”
“Ed, I meant what I said. I don’t want to cause
you any trouble.”
“I believe you.” There was a pause, and Matt
wondered if the man on the other end was glancing
around to make certain he wasn’t being observed.
“I just think you might actually have more luck
with this than we will at the moment.”
“You’re being stonewalled,” Matt muttered.
“Shut down, more like.”
“By Branson, or higher up?”
“Both. Listen, I can’t do this here—”
“What if I could meet you?”
“Fine. One-fifteen, the Lighthouse Coffee at
Riverside and Seventh.”
“I’ll be there,” Matt said, but the phone had
already gone dead in his hand.
Lighthouse Coffee was a locally owned
business started in an effort to battle the trend
toward a Starbucks on every corner. The large
shop at Riverside and Seventh was the company’s
flagship store. Housed in a gutted and restored
turn-of-the-century flour mill, the walls were
exposed red brick, and a huge grindstone
reincarnated as a fountain turned ponderously in
the middle of the cavernous space. Vaulted
ceilings soared three stories to exposed beams
above, and the original flagstone floors had been
polished to a high sheen. A fireplace dominated
one wall, a wood-burning fire roaring on the
hearth. The scent of brewing coffee permeated the
air.
The building was located right in the middle of
the
newly
renovated
Old
Town
district,
surrounded by boutiques and upscale restaurants,
and as far from the precinct where Matt worked as
was possible and still remain inside the city limits.
A few locals sat at the tables, swathed in winter
wear, but Kiernan seemed something of a big-city
anomaly in his fitted jeans, black leather jacket and
heeled boots. Of course, underneath the snappy
jacket he was wearing a neatly tucked-in T-shirt
with a picture of a pretty little horse on it that read
Screw World Peace. I Want a Pony.
For his part, Matt looked at home in his khakis
and bulky sheep’s wool-lined denim coat. He’d
worn it partly because it covered the lines of his
harness and service revolver. When he’d taken it
out of the safe, Kiernan’s eyes had lingered even
as he’d teased Matt about his big gun. He didn’t
need to be told why Matt was wearing it.
The subtle reminder seemed to subdue his
mood. He’d been uncharacteristically quiet as
they’d driven into town.
They removed their gloves and scarves on
entering, ordered coffee at the counter and then
settled at a corner table to wait. At precisely one-
fifteen, the bell above the door jingled merrily and
Ed Partridge entered. He saw Matt in the corner
and acknowledged him with a guarded glance
before going to the counter.
“Very friendly,” Kiernan said under his breath,
moving to sit in the wooden chair at Matt’s side
and freeing up the other side of the table.
“He’s a good guy,” Matt countered. “If anyone
finds out about this, it could really cause him a
problem. You might want to—”
“—let you do the talking? I figured. I’ll just sit
here and keep my mouth shut.”
“Thanks.” Matt touched the back of his hand
fleetingly. Kiernan’s eyes warmed.
Ed approached, coffee in hand, and sat at the
table without taking off his coat. He looked tired.
“Be nice if it would stop snowing, huh?” he
grumbled, removing his gloves.
“I think we’ve had about enough, yeah,” Matt
said. “It’s good to see you, Ed.”
Ed shot him a wry look. “I’ll bet.” He jerked his
head toward Kiernan. “Care to introduce me?”
“Sure. Ed Partridge, Kiernan Fitzpatrick.”
Kiernan offered his hand. “Hi.”
“The ghost guy?” Ed said, his gray brows
arching.
“Yup, that would be me,” Kiernan said. “Nice
to meet you.”
Ed stared at the offered hand for another moment
before shaking it briefly and letting go equally fast.
Kiernan’s glance at Matt was amused as he picked
up his coffee.
“I got to hear all about you.” Ed’s mouth twisted
slightly. It was hard to tell if it was a smile or a
grimace. “Branson had a litter of spaniels over you
taking this guy to the Reynolds’ house.”
“That I would have liked to see,” Matt said, and
now there was no mistaking Ed’s gruff smile.
“Yeah, it was amusing. Having Commissioner
Mitchell turn up on your behalf wasn’t a bad stunt,
either. Rawlins blabbed all over the department.
Branson looked like an idiot.” Ed’s grin widened.
“Made my whole damned week.”
Matt snorted. “There goes the promotion I was
up for.”
Ed chuckled. “Yeah, I’m guessing you won’t be
getting detective of the year.”
“He’s been after me for…a while.”
“Eighteen months, to be exact.” Ed’s eyes were
level as he took a sip of his coffee, and then set the
cup carefully on the table. “You’ll also be lucky if
the tabloid press doesn’t identify you from the clip
on the news. You’ve got to know there are people
who’d like nothing better than to…well…” He
glanced meaningfully at Kiernan.
“Out me.” Matt felt himself coloring as he
glanced over at Kiernan. “I know.”
Ed looked between the two men opposite him,
his light eyes knowing. “Listen, what you do in
your free time is none of my business. I didn’t care
eighteen months ago, and I don’t care now. You’re
a good cop, and you’ve always had my back.
Just…be careful, yeah?”
Matt nodded, warmth for his colleague growing.
“I will, Ed. And when I said I didn’t want to jam
you up…”
Ed shook his head dismissively. “I’m a big boy,
Bennett. Don’t worry about me. I can handle
myself.” He glanced over his shoulder before
leaning in. “And when I said you might have more
luck on the outside with this than we are, I meant
it.”
Matt mirrored his posture, his elbows on the
table. “So what the hell happened?” he asked, his
voice muted. “Last I heard they had nothing on
Reynolds.”
“Strange, that,” Ed said. “It remained the case,
right up until yesterday.”
“What happened yesterday?”
Ed’s hands curled around his coffee cup.
“Seems new evidence has come to light.”
“New evidence, meaning what?”
“They found the duct tape used to bind the kid’s
hands in a box in a tool shed behind a neighbor’s
garage. Along with a bottle of Ketamine. And just
guess whose fingerprints are supposedly all over
them?”
Matt’s eyes narrowed. “Who found them? The
neighbor?”
“Guy went out to fire up his snowblower, and
there they were, sitting right on top of it.
Convenient, wouldn’t you say?” Ed scowled and
took another sip of his coffee. “According to
Branson, the call came in yesterday morning.”
“Wait, hadn’t the guy had the blower out?
We’ve had thirty inches of snow since Christmas.”
Ed’s lips twisted. “I’m not sure the question
was even asked.”
Matt was incredulous. “They didn’t ask him?”
“I have no idea,” Ed answered. “None of us
have even spoken to him.”
The two cops exchanged a telling look. “I
thought the theory of the crime was it was someone
smart,” Matt said. “Someone who knew enough to
get around law enforcement.” He glanced at
Kiernan. “Someone who’d worn rubber gloves.”
Kiernan nodded once.
“Well, apparently the new theory is Reynolds
murdered the little girl, and then was careless
enough to leave his prints all over the evidence
when he dropped it off in the neighbor’s shed,
several days after committing the crime.” Ed
lowered his voice. “And my contact at the crime
lab tells me if anyone has tested the tape and the
bottle of pills, it wasn’t them.”
Matt stared into his steady gaze. “If they found
the evidence yesterday, and they arrested him this
morning, but the crime lab didn’t do the testing,
then…who did?”
“I heard a rumor it was sent to the FBI lab in the
capital.”
Matt scoffed. “Since when does our department
go to the FBI? There was no kidnapping here.
Unless that’s what they’re calling his hauling her
down to the basement…”
“I always knew you were smarter than the
average bear.” Ed leaned back in his chair.
“So, who alerted the media, and why?” Matt
asked, his jaw tight.
“Could have been anyone,” Ed answered with
studied casualness. “Someone in the DA’s office,
or a police detective who knows something rotten
when he smells it. Sometimes what a case needs is
the harsh media spotlight. And maybe a little help
from the outside.” Matt wouldn’t have sworn to it,
but he thought Ed sent Kiernan a subtle wink. “And
I need to get back uptown before I find my ass in a
sling.” He stood, hands slipping back into his
gloves. “Nice to meet you, Fitzpatrick.”
“Same here, Detective,” Kiernan said.
Ed looked at Matt. “Just to clarify, you haven’t
spoken to me.”
“Understood.”
“But if you happen to come across anything
while you’re on vacation—” one of his brows
arched sardonically, “—give me a heads up, will
you?”
“Absolutely.”
Ed saluted him with an ironic smile, then turned
and left as quickly as he’d come.
“Well, his opinion is pretty obvious,” Kiernan
said. “Marc Reynolds is being set up.”
“Not only is Reynolds being set up, he’s being
set up from the inside.” Matt reached for his
gloves and stood. “Come on, we have work to do.”
* * *
from the coffee shop, housed in an enormous brick
building built specifically for the purpose in 1903.
The inside was elegant in the way only old
buildings could be. Each large room boasted
mahogany trim and crown moldings, staircases
with gleaming dark banisters and shining
hardwood floors. The elevators were a later
addition, and Matt and Kiernan stepped off on the
third floor where the research and computer
departments were housed.
Matt led the way to a bank of computer screens
and keyboards. He pulled out a chair in front of
one of the screens, reaching into his inside jacket
pocket for the folded copy of the Reynolds’ guest
list. Kiernan pulled out a chair next to him, his
eyes fixed across the room.
Matt followed the direction of his gaze, but all
he saw was a towering section of bookcases.
“What are you looking at?” he asked as he sat
down.
“Huh?” Kiernan looked startled by the question.
“Oh, the librarian.” He sat and pulled off his
leather gloves.
Matt looked again. “What librarian?”
“The one between the stacks right there by the
window,” Kiernan replied, a faint smile on his
face. “Man, I’ll bet women are glad the styles have
changed. That Victorian-era stuff looks really