Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
neither a trait Matt associated with him.
“Okay,” Matt said. “Spill it.”
Kiernan turned his head, his eyes wide. “What?”
“You are never this quiet. What’s on your
mind?”
“How do you know I’m never this quiet?
You’ve known me all of four days.”
Matt could see his point. “Okay, how about this?
You haven’t been this quiet in our acquaintance,
which leads me to believe you have something on
your mind. Care to tell me what it is?”
Kiernan looked down, his lips pursed. He
sighed and unfastened his seat belt before he
turned to lean against the passenger door. “Okay,
look. Before the day after Christmas, you’d never
even heard of me. Contrary to what my sister
thinks, most people haven’t. And before Christmas
Eve, you’d never seen a ghost in your life. So I
guess it’s only reasonable you should doubt not
only what I can do, but what you saw as well…”
“Hey, wait a minute. I didn’t say I doubted
anything.”
Kiernan fixed him with a pointed look. “Aren’t
you?”
Matt felt irrationally as if he’d somehow
insulted Kiernan. “Look, I’m a cop, okay?
Everything I’ve done from the day I got my shield,
every investigation I’ve ever been involved with,
was rooted in reality—what I could see, what I
could prove. I’ve solved a lot of cases that way,
Kier.”
The wonderful eyes remained subdued. “I don’t
doubt it for a moment. I’m sure you’re a terrific
detective. But how many of those cases started out
with you seeing the murder victim at the scene of
the crime, standing upright and pointing you
toward their body?”
Matt bit his lower lip. “You know how many.”
“Yeah, I do.” Kiernan’s eyes searched his face.
“Back at the library, when you found the
information about Marc Reynolds buying out the
law firm, I could feel your doubts resurfacing, the
cop in you finding a way to push back not only
what you’d seen, but what I might be able to add.”
Matt started to speak, but Kiernan held up his
hand.
“No, it’s okay. It’s not unexpected, actually,
given your background. But do me a favor, all
right? If the idea I’m a crackpot who’s one brick
shy of a load starts to enter your mind, you’ll tell
me. I can leave and let you finish this on your own
if you begin to feel like I can’t contribute
anything.”
Matt was stunned. “I’m not going to feel that
way.”
“You’re sure? You didn’t, just for a moment,
think I might not know what the hell I was talking
about when I said this wasn’t motivated by
business?”
Matt searched his eyes. “I never for one moment
thought you didn’t believe what you were saying.”
Kiernan’s eyes were shrewder than Matt had
ever seen them. “Planning to run for police
commissioner at some point, Matthew? Because
that answer was certainly politically correct.”
Matt huffed and ran his fingers through his hair.
“God, you’re a pain in the ass.”
Kiernan’s answering smile was subdued but
genuine.
“I believe, unequivocally,” Matt went on, “that
you’re convinced Abby was killed by someone
who had some sort of personal ax to grind with
her. In my experience, the murders of children are
usually motivated by lots of things but personal
hatred by an adult for a child isn’t one of them. But
it doesn’t mean I don’t believe what I saw you do,
or what I saw with my own eyes. It’s just hard to
go from a life rooted firmly in the tangible to—”
he gestured between them awkwardly, “—
whatever it is we’ve been doing for the last few
days.”
The sparkle reappeared in Kiernan’s eyes. “You
mean, besides the sex.”
Matt gave him a sardonic look, and Kiernan
laughed. Matt was relieved to hear it. “Look, how
about this? How about you allow that I’m a cop
and I allow that you talk to dead people. Between
the two of us, we’ll find a way to work together to
figure this thing out.”
Kiernan studied him, and then nodded. “You just
have to promise to tell me if it gets too weird for
you.”
Matt recalled, with a sinking feeling, what
Kiernan had said about one of his former
boyfriends, and the last half hour made sense. He
reached across the center console and, with slow,
intentional deliberation, took one of Kiernan’s
hands and linked their fingers. “I won’t lie to you.
It’s weird. But I’m learning to deal, okay?”
Kiernan squeezed his hand, smiling faintly.
“Okay.”
“And just as I’m learning to deal with what you
do, you have to accept what I do, and how I do it.
Who knows? Between the two of us, we might
make a good team.”
“I kind of like the sound of the whole team
thing.” Kiernan looked at him slyly.
“I meant the case, Kier,” Matt said gruffly, but
his chest, which had begun to feel heavy, lightened.
“Oh, that too,” Kiernan quipped. He leaned
forward, giving Matt no time to react. Cupping his
jaw, he kissed him.
Matt was ordinarily very circumspect in public.
But for just a moment he allowed himself to forget
they were sitting in the busy parking lot of a
hospital, and kissed him back.
A sharp rapping on his window made Matt
jump. Sheila was looking at him through the glass,
her fur collar pulled up around her face. A
delighted grin lifted her lips.
“Christ,” he muttered. “I’ll never live this
down.”
Kiernan laughed as Matt lowered the window.
“Hello, boys,” she said wryly. “Decide to give
the parking lot a show today? Honestly, Detective.
Such a display!”
“Stow it, you obnoxious pain in my ass,” Matt
said. “What have you got?”
She looked past his shoulder to Kiernan. “He’s
so rude. Can’t you fix that?”
Kiernan chuckled. “I’ll see what I can do.”
Matt shot a quelling look over his shoulder, but
Kiernan just smiled. He turned back to Sheila.
“Come on, already, before you’re late for work.”
“Okay,” she said, suddenly all business. “Toni
and I were going over the guest list when I
mentioned to her something about the Rolex, and
she got all excited. Tells me she has a client who’s
been coming there for years who bitches every
single Christmas because her husband always
expects her to buy him a new model Rolex. The
woman goes on and on about how expensive it is,
but the payoff is she gets a new car at the same
time, so she guesses she shouldn’t really complain.
She has to special-order the watch because the
shops in town don’t carry the full line. Toni
specifically remembers the one you told me about.
Daytona Oyster made her think of NASCAR and
seafood.”
Matt’s pulse quickened. “So? Who’s the
client?”
Sheila’s eyes were bright with barely restrained
excitement. “Samantha Mitchell,” she whispered.
“Commissioner Patrick Mitchell’s wife.”
Chapter Fourteen
“Okay, so that’s pretty damning,” Kiernan said,
chewing on his thumbnail as Matt navigated the
Bronco through the snowy streets. “But I was with
him just a couple of days after the murder. He
seemed sincerely broken up about Abby’s death.”
“The one thing I do know,” Matt said, carefully
turning a corner piled two feet deep with snow, “is
that sociopaths compartmentalize well. They’re
good actors. If he is one, he could have murdered
her and still appeared to be sincerely grieving.”
Kiernan’s expression was troubled. “I’ve
always believed I was good at reading people. If
I’m wrong about this, I’m going to have to
reevaluate.”
Matt reached across to squeeze his leg. “We
don’t know anything for certain yet. We’re still
building a case. Yeah, you’re right. It’s damning,
but there might be another explanation for the
watch. I’ll admit I jumped there, too, but there’s
something about fixing on Mitchell as a suspect
that’s begun to bother me.”
“What?”
“He was so damned fast. Whoever was
eavesdropping outside of Abby’s bedroom door
got down the stairs and out the door before I could.
Whoever it was, he was really, really agile. How
old would you say Mitchell is?”
“I don’t know. Fifty-five, maybe sixty?”
“I’m thirty-two. And I’m a cop. Could a man at
least twenty years my senior actually beat me
down the stairs and be fast enough to disappear?”
Kiernan frowned. “Not unless he’s in excellent
shape, no.”
“We’ve got to find a way to get more
information about Mitchell and those watches.”
“What if we go and talk to Sheila’s friend, the
hairdresser. Toni, right? I was just thinking we
know more about all of the pieces than Sheila
does, and we might know questions to ask Sheila
wouldn’t. Maybe Mitchell’s wife revealed
something Toni didn’t think to repeat.”
“That’s a good idea.”
“Thanks.”
Matt glanced over to see Kiernan grinning.
* * *
town, sitting in the middle of a block populated by
upscale boutiques and restaurants. Matt had never
been there. Its reputation was a little too posh and
trendy for his comfort level. He’d never dropped
more than twenty bucks on a haircut in his life. But
he’d met Toni at a barbecue at his brother’s house
the summer before, so he hoped she would at least
recognize him as Sheila’s brother-in-law.
Driving was incredibly slow-going. It had
stopped snowing but the temperature had dipped
dramatically and the roads and sidewalks had
turned to solid sheets of ice. In the downtown area,
streets were reduced to one lane in each direction
and there were snow berms as high as Matt’s head
where curbside lanes should be. He was finally
able to find a parking place off the main street
about a block from Henri’s.
“Jesus,” Kiernan said as he stepped from the
Bronco and a gust of frigid wind lifted his hair. “I
think my testicles just climbed up into my
abdominal cavity in fear.”
Matt chuckled. “Lovely visual.” He cautiously
joined him on the icy sidewalk. “They’ll come
back out of hiding as soon as you warm up.”
“So you say. The poor things aren’t used to this
kind of weather. It’s traumatizing. I’m going to
expect you to check later to make sure they’re still
where they belong.”
“I can certainly make an inspection of the
general area. I’m a detective. It’s all about
gathering evidence.”
Kiernan’s laugh rang on the frosty air. “That’s
another joke, Matthew. I hope you know you’re
blowing your whole stoic-cop image every time
you smirk like that.”
“I’m not smirking,” Matt countered, but he was
pretty sure he was.
The air inside of Henri’s was warm and carried
the scents of cinnamon and hot tea mixed with
some sort of hair-processing solution. The sleek
chrome and black lacquer lobby was deserted, but
the sound of voices came from farther back in the
shop. He stepped around a divider.
Three women and one man were seated in the
back, but they clearly weren’t clients. The chairs
were turned toward the center aisle, and two of the
women were holding mugs in their hands.
“Hello,” he said tentatively. The group of
people turned.
“Oh, for heaven’s sakes.” An older woman with
sleek, highlighted blond hair set her mug aside and
stood. Matt recognized her immediately. “I’m
sorry! We were so busy gossiping we didn’t even
hear the bell. Almost all of our clients for the
afternoon have canceled, so…” She was coming
toward him, and he saw the moment recognition
crossed her attractive face. “Oh, wait. We’ve met,
haven’t we?”
Matt offered his hand. “Matt Bennett. Sheila’s
brother-in-law.”
“Oh, of course!” She took his hand. “Matt! I
remember. How are you?”
“Good.” He gestured toward Kiernan, who’d
stopped at his side. “Toni, this is Kiernan
Fitzpatrick.” Kiernan shook her hand with a
friendly smile.
“So,” Toni said, lowering her voice, “I’m