Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
more chances. He drove them quickly down the
hill and into a small, secluded neighborhood
where the snow was still deep and the houses
dark.
He parked the car, letting the motor run. “I’m
soaked,” he said. “Snow fell off of the house and
landed right on me. What about you? I’ve got some
workout clothes in a bag in the back.”
“Think you might have a dry shirt?”
“Probably.” Matt climbed through over the gear
shift and knelt on the back seat. “I won’t make any
promises for how clean it is. Some of this stuff has
been back here since I painted my mom’s garage in
August.” He unhooked a cloth cover that hid the
storage space and reached for a black vinyl bag.
“Has anyone ever told you there’s something
sinister about a person who has such a neat car?”
Kiernan teased. “Did you just vacuum back there?”
“Before Christmas. I helped Bill and Sheila and
Kyle get a tree, and there were pine needles all
over the place.” He unzipped the bag and
rummaged around inside.
“I noticed there’s no tree at your place,”
Kiernan said softly.
Matt’s hands stilled, just for a moment, before
he pulled out a hooded sweatshirt. “There didn’t
seem much point,” he answered, not looking up. “I
knew I’d either be with Bill and Sheil, or at my
mom’s.” He pulled sweatpants, socks and tennis
shoes from the bag, and continued to rummage in
the dark depths. Finally he stopped, aware of the
eyes calmly studying him. “I haven’t had a tree for
the last two years,” he admitted quietly. “I haven’t
wanted one. I haven’t wanted Christmas.”
“I know. Maybe next year you’ll be ready.”
Matt studied the handsome face and felt
something in his chest begin to yearn. He could
picture it—his living room, a massive tree in the
corner, and a dark-haired man in flannel pajama
bottoms sitting cross-legged next to it, wrapping a
small mountain of presents. The vision was
unexpected, but warmed him. “Yeah. Maybe.”
He returned to searching the bag, and his fingers
closed on the soft fabric of a worn T-shirt. He
exhaled on a laugh when he remembered it.
“Here.” He tossed it to Kiernan. “It seems
almost providential.”
Kiernan shook out the faded green T-shirt.
Pictured was a cartoonish giraffe that had huge
eyes and ridiculously long eyelashes, with a dialog
bubble that read Moo. I’m a Goat.
Kiernan’s burst of laughter made Matt’s smile
widen.
“Where did you get this?”
“My nephew picked that out for my birthday
when he was three years old.” Matt turned to sit on
the back seat and pulled off his boots. “He liked
the giraffe.”
“I like the giraffe.” Kiernan’s smile lingered.
Matt took off his jacket and unbuckled his gun
harness.
“So, I discovered something about myself
tonight,”
Kiernan
said
conversationally,
unbuttoning his coat.
“Oh, yeah?” Matt pulled his shirt over his head
and let it fall to the floor. “What’s that?”
“I find breaking and entering extremely sexy.”
Kiernan’s eyes moved fondly over Matt’s bare
torso. “Or maybe I just find breaking and entering
with you extremely sexy.”
Matt lifted his hips to unzip his damp jeans,
pushing the wet fabric down his legs. “I’m sure
there’s a compliment in there somewhere.”
“There definitely is. Would it sound corny if I
said goose bumps look good on you?”
“Yes.” Matt stepped into the heavy sweatpants.
“Are you going to change?”
“Yeah.”
“Any time soon?”
“Yeah.”
“Sometime today?”
Kiernan nodded again, but instead of removing
his jacket, he smoothly climbed into the back seat
and straddled Matt’s lap.
Matt looked at him in exasperation. “You really
like that maneuver,” he said dryly.
Kiernan grinned. “Works for a guy my size.” He
leaned in. “You complaining?”
“Kiernan, I don’t…” Matt started, but that was
as far as he got.
Kiernan pressed his mouth over Matt’s,
reducing his words to a sputter as he sent his
mobile tongue forward. It took Matt a moment to
catch up, but only a moment. The press of
Kiernan’s body, the feel of his gloved hands, sent a
shaft of desire through him. He gripped the strands
of Kiernan’s thick hair and returned the kiss with
equal intensity. Kiernan trailed one hand down
over Matt’s bare chest, rubbing his fingers over his
cold, taut nipples, and the supple leather against
his skin made gooseflesh break out down Matt’s
arms.
The rush from their narrow escape translated
quickly into a rush of heat, and the hand not tangled
in Kiernan’s hair slid up his thigh and around to
grip his ass. He could easily become an adrenaline
junkie, particularly with Kiernan around. The lithe
body on top of him pressed closer, groin to groin,
and Matt could feel Kiernan’s burgeoning hardness
through the thin material of the soft sweatpants.
Kiernan pulled back from the kiss, his mouth
moving to hover over Matt’s ear. The hot rush of
his breath sent a jolt of want straight to Matt’s
cock.
“Have you any idea,” Kiernan whispered, “how
fucking hot you are when you’re in cop mode?”
Matt groaned as Kiernan rolled his pelvis
against him. “Cop mode?” he managed.
“You know.” Kiernan swirled his tongue in his
ear. Matt closed his eyes on the resulting rush of
heat. “All steely-eyed and hard-jawed, your gun in
your hand.” He nipped lightly at his lobe, and
Matt’s hips jerked up. “You have no idea how
much I wanted to lie on the leather couch in that
media room and invite you to have your wicked
way with me.” His hand moved down Matt’s
stomach, caressing his abs.
“That would have been a very bad idea.” Matt
couldn’t help but press up into Kiernan’s touch.
“Maybe, but it would have been hot.” Kiernan
let his hand drift lower, feather light touch
skimming the front of his sweatpants. “You take my
breath. Did you know that?”
Matt bit his lip and shook his head.
Kiernan leaned back enough to look into his
eyes. “You’re a beautiful man, Matthew Bennett,”
he said, his voice soft but intense as he stroked him
more firmly. “And someone should tell you that,
every day for the rest of your life.”
Matt’s heart swelled and his throat thickened,
and when Kiernan kissed him again, Matt clutched
him, arched up and turned them, pushing Kiernan
down onto his back on the seat. Kiernan spread his
legs, tacitly inviting Matt into the resulting space
between his thighs. Without conscious thought,
Matt lifted Kiernan’s knee and pushed it toward
his chest, and kissed him with every ounce of
passion he possessed.
He felt so alive, more alive than he’d felt in
over a year. But it was more than just desire. He
not only wanted Kiernan, he was becoming more
and more certain he needed him, like he needed
air.
The thought didn’t frighten him at all.
Matt reached down to palm the hardness
straining the fly of Kiernan’s jeans, and his hips
jerked up.
The sound of a car door slamming was as sharp
as a gunshot in the silence, and it was like a bucket
of cold water being thrown on him. Matt’s head
jerked up, his heart leaping into his throat. In the
driveway of the house across the street, taillights
flared. A Toyota backed out and drove away.
Matt exhaled heavily, his head dropping to press
against Kiernan’s sternum.
“Much as I hate to say it—” he said, sounding
very reasonable for a man with a hard-on, “—this
really isn’t the time, or the place.” He leaned back
and pulled Kiernan into a sitting position.
“Yeah,” Kiernan grumbled, looking disgruntled
as he adjusted himself inside his jeans. “Someday I
am going to convince you we can fuck in this
thing.”
“Maybe so, but not tonight.” Matt tugged on the
front of Kiernan’s coat. “Change your shirt. It’s
soaked.”
“Fine, killjoy.” Kiernan pulled off the coat in
question. “I was enjoying that.”
“So was I.” Matt leaned in for a fleeting kiss to
pouting lips. “We can do more of it later, when
we’re warm. I’d think you’d enjoy not getting
pneumonia more.”
“Okay, fine. I’ll give you that.”
Matt strapped his holster over his bare chest,
then pulled on the lumpy hoodie and zipped it up.
He bent at the waist to pull on dry socks when
Kiernan made a soft, startled sound.
“I completely forgot about this.” He was holding
a lumpy manila envelope in his hands.
Matt’s mouth fell open. “Where was that?”
“I tucked it up under my shirt when I heard the
housekeeper
get
back.”
Kiernan
grinned
triumphantly.
“You stole it?”
“Well, I didn’t think breaking into someone’s
house would be complete without stealing
something,” he said lightly. “I’m kidding, Matt.
Lighten up. Actually, I grabbed it instinctively and
then forgot about it.” He pried open the brads with
his thumb and lifted the flap. When he turned the
envelope over, a small roll of dark fabric slid out
into his hands.
“Looks like a scarf. It’s been tied with a knot.”
“Yeah, it has.” Matt leaned closer.
Kiernan ran the fabric through his gloved
fingers. He held it up so he could examine it more
closely in what light there was. “Weird thing to
hide like that.”
“Yeah. Think it’s another of Karen’s?”
“Possibly.” A frown deepening between his
black brows, Kiernan examined the knot and
caught his breath, his fingers stilling on it.
“What is it?”
Kiernan swallowed heavily. “Remember,” he
said, his voice unsteady, “when you said Preston
was the kind of guy who kept trophies?” He held
the scarf higher, his fingers lifting something
hanging from the knot that looked like a few
strands of curling gossamer monofilament.
Matt realized what he was looking at, and his
stomach turned. “Christ,” he wheezed, feeling even
colder than he had when lying in the snow. “That’s
Abby’s hair.”
“This is what he used to cover her eyes. The son
of a bitch did keep it as a memento.”
“You said there was a scarf.” That made two
things Kiernan had known the police hadn’t—the
butterscotch candy and the scarf. “Put it back in the
envelope. It’s good you haven’t handled it without
your gloves. We can get it to Ed, and he can get it
to the crime lab. They can do a DNA match on the
hair and prove it’s Abby’s.”
Kiernan returned the scarf to the envelope and
put it on the seat between them. “And how are you
going to explain to him how you came to be in
possession of it?”
“No clue,” Matt said. “I’ll worry about it when
we get to it. Change your shirt, and then let’s figure
out what our next move is.”
Kiernan unbuttoned his shirt. Matt’s phone rang,
and he cursed as he rummaged through the clothes
on the floor searching for it. He finally found it in
the back pocket of his jeans, and slapped it open.
“Hey, Sheila.”
“Do not ‘Hey, Sheila’, me,” she said, her voice
harsh and tinny through the phone. “Would you
care to explain to me exactly why the police were
just at my house?”
Matt had been running his fingers through his
tousled hair, and stopped with his hand still in the
damp curls. “Oh, shit. I’m sorry.” His hand
dropped into his lap and he closed his eyes. “I
should have warned you that might happen.”
“It would have been nice. I got home from work,
and they were standing on my porch. They were
looking for you. And they seized Kyle’s laptop.”
“They took Kyle’s computer,” Matt said wearily
to Kiernan. “Sheila, were these detectives, or
uniforms?”
“Two detectives,” she answered. “I think I
recognized one of them. You work with him.”
“Do you remember his name?”
“Conrad, I think.”
Matt closed his eyes, his mouth tightening. That
made perfect sense. Dale Conrad hated him. He’d