Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
addresses, remember? It’s only a matter of time
before they hit on the fact it’s for a computer
registered to another Bennett. Then they’ll have the
house address. We need to be gone by then.”
He started from the room, pulling Kiernan along
by his arm.
“You think they might come looking for us?” he
asked, sounding startled. “It’s not like we broke
the law or anything.”
“No. But we still have to assume we just found
information someone went to a boatload of trouble
to hide.”
They’d arrived in the kitchen, and Matt paused
to look out through the curtains on the door, his
hand instinctively reaching under his jacket. His
fingers closed around the butt of his service
revolver, but the back yard was dark and silent.
“Matt,” Kiernan whispered. “Ambrose Garrett
Preston.
”
“Yeah,” Matt said, his voice equally hushed.
“As in, Assistant District Attorney Garrett
Preston.”
Matt held Kiernan’s wide-eyed gaze. “I don’t
think it’s a stretch to assume he’s named after his
father.”
Chapter Fifteen
Matt cranked up the heat to take the chill from the
Bronco’s cab and clear the frost from the
windshield. He chewed the corner of his lip as his
mind raced, trying to decide what their next move
should be.
“So, now what do we do?” Kiernan asked.
Matt looked at the earnest, almost eager face. “I
should take you straight to the airport,” he said, his
voice rough. “Get you on the first available plane
out of here if there is one.”
Kiernan’s mouth dropped open. “What? Why?”
“Don’t you get it? It isn’t safe! Someone has
already taken a shot at you, leveled threats against
you. As long as I thought they didn’t know where
you were, I believed I could keep you safe. But
they aren’t stupid, Kier. They’ll have figured out
you’re with me. Whoever talked to the media took
care of that.”
“‘They,’ who, Matt? Preston?”
“At the very least, Preston.” Matt lowered his
voice. “Whoever just denied me access to a
departmental website knows we’re on to
something. They can trace the pages I went to.
Christ.” He ran his hand over his hair and stared at
the back of his brother’s dark house. “I shouldn’t
have come here.”
Kiernan followed the direction of Matt’s gaze.
“Do you think they’ll come after your family?”
“I have no idea, but I do know this—when Ed
said they were on the inside, he wasn’t kidding. I
have no idea how high up this goes, but at the very
least, they’re watching the computer systems. And
inside those systems is every bit of information
they need to track me down. My home address, my
banking info, the license plate number on this car.
Everything.” He reached across and grabbed his
hand. “I can’t keep you safe anymore.”
“Bullshit.”
“Look, I appreciate your faith in me,” Matt said,
more exasperated than flattered, “but let’s face
facts. The smart thing to do would be for you to get
the hell out of town as quickly as you can, and for
me to try to get someone to listen to reason about
Preston.”
Kiernan’s blue eyes flashed. “Oh, you think
that’s going to work, do you? Branson isn’t going
to immediately can your ass for continuing to look
into Abby’s murder when you were specifically
told not to? And you think anyone is likely to
believe you, when you’re out because the
department shrink put you out?”
“Probably not. But it isn’t safe, Kiernan. And I
don’t want anything to happen to you!” As he said
the words aloud, Matt realized just how true they
were. He wasn’t sure what his time with Kiernan
would lead to, but the idea of his actually being
hurt made the cold outside seem like nothing
compared to the chill it caused to fill his chest.
Kiernan’s face softened, but he still shook his
head slowly. “I won’t leave. I won’t leave you to
face this alone. I won’t leave Abby in the lurch.”
His wide eyes were solemn. “It goes against
everything I believe in. So we need to come up
with another plan. Okay?”
Matt looked into the resolved expression and
exhaled raggedly. “You’re out of your mind, you
know that, right?”
Kiernan smiled. “So I’ve been told. Repeatedly.
What comes next?”
“Well, all signs point to Preston. We just don’t
have any solid evidence connecting him with the
crime, or any reason he might have for murdering a
six-year-old girl.”
“Still, we’ve got the watch, and the candy.”
“But it’s circumstantial. We can’t prove
anything.” His lips twisted. “Other than a kid who
was waiting tables for a catering company who
saw a distinctive, expensive watch.”
“And the butterscotch candies,” Kiernan
persisted.
“Our only witness to the candy is dead.”
“I know, I know, she can’t testify. So, what
you’re telling me is we need evidence. Where
would we be most likely to find some? He didn’t
leave anything at the crime scene.”
“If I was on the job, and he was considered a
viable suspect, the first step would be to convince
a judge to give us a search warrant. But there isn’t
a judge in this town who would consider him a
suspect. They think they have their man. We’re
tilting at windmills.”
“I like windmills, and the analogy comparing us
to Don Quixote isn’t necessarily far off the mark.
Marching into hell for a heavenly cause,
Matthew.” Kiernan’s smile faded into a thoughtful
expression. “The watch would most likely be at
his house, huh?”
“Or on his wrist. And the only way to be sure
would be to search his residence. But I’m not on
the job. Anything else would be breaking and
entering.”
“Which is a very bad idea for a cop who wants
his job back.”
“Which is a very bad idea for anyone who
doesn’t want to be arrested.”
Kiernan slumped back against the passenger
door. “Of course, first things first. You’d have to
know where the sick bastard lives.”
Matt’s thoughts raced. If he went any further
down this road, there would be no turning back.
He could lose everything. Not just his job, but his
pension, his house, everything he’d worked for.
However, if he was fired, which he was no doubt
going to be, all those things would be in jeopardy
anyway.
And if he did nothing, the prick would get away
with the cold-blooded murder of a little kid.
He put the Bronco into reverse.
“I know where the sick bastard lives,” he said,
and enjoyed the delight that filled Kiernan’s face.
* * *
commented.
Matt navigated the narrow street, cars parked
bumper to bumper down each side. He grimaced,
wondering what they would do if it was Preston.
It wasn’t. The last house before they arrived at
the top of the steep street was awash with festive
lights, and they could see a crowd of well-dressed
people through the massive windows. At the end of
the street, Preston’s low-slung modern house was
mostly dark.
“This may work to our advantage.” Matt
maneuvered around a Mini Cooper and pulled the
SUV in next to a sturdy guardrail. He killed the
lights and the motor. “I had no idea what I was
going to do about the Bronco if the street was
deserted.”
“Yeah, that’s not a problem. Is that it?” Kiernan
asked, studying the house perched at the very end
of the curving street.
“That’s it.”
It was a geometric series of levels and angles
clinging to the edge of the sheer drop-off. Stark,
almost Erector-set-like lines of staggered roof
were heavy with snow. It looked like broken slabs
of pavement, stacked like fallen cards. Light
fixtures on white columns flanked the curving
drive, throwing a bluish glow on the ground. The
rest of the yard was lost in shadow. There were
lights on inside, but they seemed to be deep within
the expansive dwelling. None of the floor-to-
ceiling plate glass windows across the front of the
facade were lit.
“Well, that’s just god-awful ugly.”
“Unfortunately,
having
money
doesn’t
automatically guarantee you have taste.” Matt
peered through the darkness. He recalled Brad
joking that it looked like a poorly designed STD
clinic, and smiled faintly.
“Okay, so now what?”
Matt saw a shadow on a wall deep inside,
movement in what might have been a kitchen or
family room. “There’s someone moving around
inside. We can’t risk anything right now.”
“So, what do we do?”
“We wait.”
“For what?”
Matt got comfortable in his bucket seat. “Until
whoever that is leaves.”
“What if they don’t?”
“Then we come back tomorrow. And we keep
coming back until no one is here.”
“Like a stakeout?”
“Exactly like a stakeout.”
Kiernan grinned in delight. “How cool is that?”
“Yeah, sounds like fun now. Wait until we’ve
sat here for six hours, we’re frozen solid and our
asses are numb.”
After that, they lapsed into silence. The Bronco
was cooling rapidly, but Matt was able to study the
layout. For a house that size it was relatively close
to the street, necessitated by the canyon beyond, no
doubt. The drive and street in front had been
plowed, which should simplify things. He
cataloged in his mind what they should look for
once they got inside. The Rolex, obviously, but
what else? Some sort of covering for shoes,
surgical gloves, butterscotch candies? Stashing the
duct tape and Ketamine in the neighbor’s shed was
one way to get rid of evidence. But what else was
there? Something to tie him to Marc and Karen
Reynolds and their daughter, but what?
Happy inebriated guests in dressy outfits left the
house down the road, some slipping comically on
the ice as they passed. They were loud and full of
liquid cheer, but thankfully they didn’t seem to
notice the two men sitting in the white Bronco. The
silence in the vehicle was weighted, and the cold
grew more and more uncomfortable.
Kiernan shifted restlessly. “How long have we
been here?”
Matt glanced at his watch. “About forty-five
minutes.”
“Feels longer.”
Matt hadn’t seen any movement inside the house
for a while. He contemplated trying to break in
through the back but decided against it; he could
see the small sign from one of the local home
security companies just next to the garage. The last
thing he needed was to trip the alarm, then try to
explain to some uniform what he’d been doing, or
to come face to face with the ADA himself.
Crossing his arms, he sank a bit lower in his seat,
his eyes fixed on the house.
Kiernan shifted beside him and his shoulder
pressed against Matt’s when he leaned closer. “So,
I suppose making out to pass the time is frowned
on during stakeouts.”
Matt snorted out a laugh. “You could say that,
yeah. Besides, most of the detectives in our
department are overweight, balding and married.”
“Clearly a deterrent.”
Matt chuckled. “Yeah.”
Quiet returned, and Matt found the solid weight
against his shoulder comforting. He’d sat more
than one stakeout with Brad. Initially, his presence
in the front of the car had created enough
unresolved sexual tension to cut with a knife, but
once they were a couple, he’d found it
comfortable. There was a similarity to the way he
felt with Kiernan’s weight against his arm, and the
comparison wasn’t lost on him.
Giggling, a young couple passed on the driver’s
side, the young woman blonde and leggy in a very
short, sparkly silver skirt. Her date was tall and
dark haired and held onto her arm to make sure she
didn’t fall. She slipped and gasped, and then
giggled again, caressing her companion’s thigh as
he unlocked the shiny sports car parked in front of
them.