Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
“He’s going to get lucky,” Kiernan murmured,
his tone amused.
“Or she’s going to pass out.”
They were so busy watching the young man
trying to maneuver his drunken date into the car
they didn’t immediately notice the garage door on
the house across the street start to lift. When
Kiernan did, he gripped Matt’s arm hard and
pointed. “Look.”
The door slid slowly up. Headlights set on
bright washed the street in stark, unforgiving light,
and the couple in front of them planted themselves
against their vehicle as a sleek car roared from the
garage and flew past them in a spray of wet snow.
“Son of a bitch,” the young man said. “Watch
where you’re going, asshole!”
But the car was already weaving its way down
the hilly road, the red taillights growing smaller in
the distance.
“That was the silver Mercedes,” Matt said.
“The one that passed us leaving Karen Reynolds’
house.”
“Looks like Preston is in a hurry, doesn’t it?”
The garage door slid closed, then it immediately
started to open again.
“What the hell…” Matt straightened in his seat,
watching as the door retraced its movements,
sliding open and then remaining that way. He
stared, waiting for someone to enter the garage
from a door in the middle of the back wall, but no
one did. “This could not be that easy,” he muttered,
looking at the meticulously neat garage.
“He was in a bit of a rush,” Kiernan said, his
voice brimming with thinly veiled excitement.
“And maybe,” he went on, a smile tugging at the
corner of his mouth, “we’ve been given a little
spiritual intervention.”
Matt searched the brightly lit space, a chill
skirting over his shoulders. “Abby?”
“I don’t see her,” Kiernan said. “But I can sense
something.”
“Okay.” Matt wondered fleetingly when such an
announcement had ceased to seem weird, but
decided it didn’t bear thinking about at the
moment.
They watched the garage, and they waited. The
couple in front of them managed to get into their
car and leave, and the square of white light from
the open garage door continued to spill into the
street. Ten minutes passed, then fifteen. Finally,
Matt unfastened his seat belt and Kiernan did the
same.
“I don’t suppose it would do me any good to ask
you to stay in the car?”
Kiernan sent him a narrowed-eyed look rife
with exasperation.
“Yeah, that’s what I thought. Okay, fine. But
you’ll do as I tell you, when I tell you. Got it?”
“Whatever you say, Officer.” He rubbed his
hands together. “Let’s go break in to someone’s
house!” He grinned impishly. “You have no idea
how long I’ve wanted to say that.”
“I’m not screwing around here, Kiernan,” Matt
said sharply. “We don’t know what’s in there,
who’s in there. I think it was Preston in the car, but
the windows were tinted dark enough I can’t be
sure. He could still be in that house. We could
trigger an alarm set for the door, which means
we’d have to make a run for it. Whatever happens,
you need to stick close to me and let me take the
lead, you got it?”
Kiernan nodded solemnly, even though his eyes
gleamed with excitement.
“I wish that light wasn’t on,” Matt muttered.
“It’s going to be like being onstage.”
Almost as soon as the words passed his lips, the
light went out, plunging the open garage, the
driveway and the street into darkness.
Matt jerked in surprise. “Okay. That’s just
fucking creepy.”
“That’s fortuitous,” Kiernan said, amusement
making his voice tremble. “I think that wasn’t so
much divine intervention as a timer.”
“Yeah, I like that version better.”
Kiernan chuckled as they climbed out of the car.
The temperature had dropped and it was a brutal
slap in the face. Kiernan hissed, tucking his hands
under his arms. Matt paused to make certain there
weren’t any stray partygoers in the street and then
crossed, Kiernan close behind. When they got to
the columns flanking the drive, Matt ducked low
and quickly cut around. Kiernan followed, almost
silent behind him.
They pressed themselves against the house, and
Matt inched his way toward the open garage door.
Before he entered, he glanced back at Kiernan,
who was close against his side.
“You stay here,” he whispered firmly.
“But…”
“No but’s. You said you’d do what I told you.
You will not go in there until I determine the house
is empty. Now, duck down over there.” He
gestured to some tall bushes that flanked the door.
“I’ll come back and get you when I know it’s
clear.”
Kiernan obviously wasn’t happy about it if the
set of his mouth was anything to judge by, but he
didn’t argue. Matt waited long enough to see him
secret himself behind the shrub, then moved
cautiously through the darkened garage. When he
arrived at the door into the house, he unfastened
the leather strap holding his revolver in place and
pulled it out of the holster. Holding it near his
head, he reached for the doorknob, steeling himself
for the blare of an alarm. His heart was beating so
hard he could feel it in his throat.
It was almost anticlimactic when the door
clicked and eased open into silence. It didn’t even
squeak.
Matt stepped into the dim interior, closing the
door silently behind him. To his left was a large
formal living room. Light spilled into it through a
doorway, throwing deep shadows across an
enormous sectional and a huge, dark fireplace.
Floor-to-ceiling corner windows showed a
breathtaking view of the city below, and a black
grand piano sat in the corner, its lid propped open.
He moved stealthily on nearly silent feet and did
a walk through, slowly, cautiously, searching for
shadows, listening for footsteps. He moved
carefully from room to room, gun extended and
finger on the trigger, but the main floor was empty.
A set of stairs led to a finished basement, but it
was one huge open space without a single door
into another room, nowhere for someone to hide,
no furnishings.
He holstered his gun when he arrived back
upstairs.
He leaned around the garage doorframe and
found Kiernan where he’d left him, still crouched
behind the bushes. “It’s all clear.”
Kiernan jerked slightly and glared up at him.
“Good. I’m freezing my fucking nubs off.”
Matt snorted softly as Kiernan slipped into the
dark garage. “You do realize it’s impossible to
actually freeze your nubs off, right?”
“So you say. My nubs would beg to differ.”
They’d taken only a few steps when Kiernan
caught Matt’s hand, causing his heart to leap into
his throat. Kiernan gestured toward the other side
of the door with his head. “The molding.”
A piece of wide rubber molding that had been
used as insulation around the garage door had
come loose and was hanging, swinging slightly, in
front of the door sensor. Anything blocking the
sensor would cause the door to re-open.
“Fortuitous.” Matt opened the door and stepped
into the dim quiet of the house. He heard the soft
shuffle of footsteps as Kiernan followed him, and
the muted clicking sound as he pulled the door
closed.
Matt caught Kiernan’s eye and pointed at a
square glass coffee table with chrome fittings
sitting in front of the sofa. On it was a cut-crystal
candy dish, filled to the brim with small hard
candies wrapped in golden cellophane.
Kiernan nodded in acknowledgement. Then Matt
spotted a laptop computer beside the dish, top
open. The screen was dark. He crossed silently to
the sectional. Leaning over the table, he touched
the mouse pad with a gloved finger, and the screen
burst to life.
Pictured was the master sign-in page for the
police department’s search engine. Matt exhaled in
a rush. He’d been fairly certain it had been
Preston, but this provided confirmation. He felt
Kiernan lean over his shoulder, heard the quiet
sound he made when he saw the screen.
“It is him, then,” he murmured. “There’s no
mistake.”
Matt nodded. “Yeah, it’s him.”
“Which means he knows you were doing a
search on his mother.”
“Yeah. We need to do this and get out of here
before he comes back. Come on.”
Moving with new determination, Matt walked
quietly through the immaculate, almost painfully
modern kitchen, all black granite and stainless
steel. He passed a shadowy bathroom and turned
into another room, this one with heavy dark
furniture and an enormous flat-screen television on
the wall. “We’ll start here.”
Kiernan immediately moved over to a huge set
of shelves that held as many DVDs as Matt had
ever seen outside of a video store. “What am I
looking for?”
“Anything that seems out of place.”
“For instance, Rodgers and Hammerstein
musicals?”
“You’re kidding.”
“I’m not.” Kiernan looked over his shoulder, a
brow raised. “Are you sure this guy is straight?”
Matt snorted softly and turned to the bar. Aside
from the fact the alcohol was all the best money
could buy and appeared to be alphabetized, Matt
couldn’t find anything out of place in the cupboard
under the black granite counter. Another small
candy dish held even more of the butterscotch
candies, and he picked one up, sniffing it to be
sure. The sweet, buttery aroma was unmistakable.
He briefly scanned a row of pinball machines.
Kiernan called out to him quietly. “Matt, this
guy has crazy OCD.”
“What do you mean?” Matt went to him.
“Look at the DVD’s.” It was an eclectic
selection, with all nine seasons of
Cheers
buttressed against the first five seasons of
Dexter.
Immediately after were several full seasons of
Doctor
Who
and
Entourage.
“They’re
alphabetized,” Kiernan said. “Man, this guy
watches a lot of television.”
“I don’t think he watches any television,” Matt
countered.
Kiernan gestured. “He has all of this.”
“Look closer. None of it is open. It’s all still in
the shrink-wrap.” Every single DVD on the shelf
was still in its original clear plastic. “He’s a
collector,” Matt said. “They’re worth more
unopened.”
“And it’s not just movies and television shows.
Books, too.”
A bookcase full of hundreds of books, all
apparently new, stretched along an entire wall.
“I wonder what else he collects? Let’s check the
master bedroom.” Matt walked to a set of double
doors in the far wall, Kiernan on his heels.
The doors opened silently on well-oiled hinges
to an expansive sitting room lit softly by a small
lamp in the far corner. Butter-soft camel leather
furniture sat before yet another fireplace and there
was a thick Oriental carpet on the floor. A
lithograph of a
Phalaenopsis
orchid bloom, at
least six feet wide and equally as tall, hung above
an elegant side table on which sat a crystal vase,
full of the trailing stems of the same white blooms.
The room was beautiful but seemed oddly feminine
when compared to the rest of the house.
“Is it just me…” Kiernan mused.
Matt shook his head. “No.” He headed for
another door. “Bedroom.”
The bed was king-sized and covered in a silk
duvet, also in a soft cream color. A stack of
assorted pillows was piled in front of the
headboard, all in shades of peach and soft green,
and the lamps on the two bedside stands were
crystal. The room was beautiful, but Matt couldn’t
connect the Preston he knew with the almost fussy
décor.
“Matt.”
Something in Kiernan’s voice alerted him. Matt
turned to find him studying an elaborate collage on
the far wall. He’d noticed it in passing, but hadn’t