Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
to Kiernan, who was no longer behind the sofa.
“That was…” he began, but immediately noticed
something was wrong. Kiernan was standing but he
was leaning on the couch, one hand clutching his
chest and a dark stain on his lips near the corner of
his mouth. Something wet and shiny began to drip
down his chin. “No.”
Kiernan collapsed onto the floor.
“No, no, no…” Matt scrambled to him and
yanked open Kiernan’s jacket, searching his chest,
but it was too dark for him to see anything. “Turn
on a light. For God’s sakes, Karen, turn on a
light!”
He laid his hand in the center of Kiernan chest
and felt heat and wetness under his palm. “No,” he
said again, pressing down. “This isn’t happening.”
A lamp flared to life in the corner. Matt lifted
his hand and stared at his palm. It was smeared
with blood. A stain was spreading from a neat hole
right between the giraffe’s too-large, absurdly
lashed eyes.
“Karen, dial nine-one-one,” Matt shouted.
“Hurry. Do it now!”
She appeared around the sofa, her eyes wide.
“Oh my God, is he hurt?”
“Just dial the number.” Matt tore off his hoodie
and balled it up. “Quickly!” Karen disappeared.
“Oh, Christ,” he cried, pressing the wad of fleece
over the wound. “Kiernan…”
The wide blue eyes didn’t look frightened, just
startled. “I’m shot, aren’t I?” The blood at the
corner of his lips grew frothy.
“It’s going to be all right,” he told Kiernan
softly. “You’re going to be all right.” His heart
lurched. Blood had dripped down onto his neck
and covered his lips.
“Matthew.” Kiernan lifted a trembling hand and
Matt caught it in his, squeezing hard. “Funny,” he
murmured, his eyes drifting closed. “I can’t really
feel it at all.”
Matt continued to squeeze his hand and press
against the wound as the sound of sirens grew in
the distance.
Chapter Eighteen
The plastic chairs in the waiting room outside the
ICU were unforgiving but Matt scarcely noticed.
The nurses came to check on him periodically, but
he barely noticed them, either. He felt numb.
Utterly and completely numb.
When the police arrived at the Reynolds’ home,
he’d still been pressing the blood-soaked jacket to
Kiernan’s chest, still speaking to him softly,
although he’d long since ceased to reply. Kiernan
was having trouble breathing, and Matt had no idea
what to do for him.
Karen Reynolds talked to the first responding
officers, and they approached Preston but when
they found him unresponsive, decided to wait for
medical personnel.
It was the only time Matt spoke to them. “If you
think that piece of crap is being seen before this
man, you’re out of your fucking minds.”
The uniformed officer came over to assess
Kiernan’s wound and agreed.
The ambulance arrived, and Matt stood aside as
they did rudimentary field treatment, cutting the
shirt away, packing the wound with gauze and
putting a thick bandage over it. It was the first time
Matt became aware that the wound in Kiernan’s
chest was the exit wound. There was another in the
middle of his back. He supposed he should have
known from the pool of blood that had been
spreading beneath Kiernan, but he’d been too
focused on his chest to notice.
He heard something about a collapsed lung and
hemorrhaging. The words made his blood run cold.
A female paramedic asked him if he was
injured. Matt shook his head mutely, wondering
why she would think so. They asked him again
when they arrived in the ER, and he snapped at the
nurse. It wasn’t until he was in the men’s room at
the hospital and glanced in a mirror that he could
see what she’d seen. They’d given him a green
scrub to wear in the ambulance. It had blood all
over it. So did his hands, and his arms. There was
even a smudge of dried blood on his cheek. All of
it Kiernan’s. Too much blood, he thought as he
stared at himself in horror. Too much for one body
to lose.
The ER was terrifying. They tried to get him to
leave the room, but he flashed his badge and
refused, and they left him alone. He watched as
they cut away Kiernan’s clothes, started an IV,
assessed his injury. He looked pale and small
lying there, all his usual animation absent. The
sight made Matt’s throat ache.
“In and out,” a doctor said. “Entry wound rear
upper right quadrant, exit wound front center.
Traumatic pneumothorax, right lung. Clipped a
major artery, with resulting blood loss…”
Matt knew it was true. He’d seen the puddle on
the hardwood floor at the house, the amount on the
floor of the ambulance, the trail left as they
wheeled the gurney into an exam room. So much
blood…
He rubbed his forehead and noticed he still had
dried blood caked under his nails. He needed a
shower—but not until Kiernan was out of surgery
and they told him he was fine.
Because he would be fine, he told himself over
and over. He would. He had to be. He would be
fine. Because the alternative…he couldn’t even
allow himself to think about it. If he did, his chest
felt tight and he couldn’t breathe. His hands would
shake, reflecting the trembling shuddering through
his core.
No. He’d be fine. He’d be fine.
“Oh, Matty! There you are!”
Sheila entered the waiting room, and he pushed
to his feet only to be taken into her embrace. She
held him tightly, and he encircled her with his
arms, dropping his forehead onto her shoulder and
inhaling her comforting scent. She clutched his
back and reached up with one hand to card her
fingers in his hair.
“Are you all right?” she asked finally, her mouth
near his ear. He hesitated, and then shook his head.
“Oh, sweetheart. How is he?”
“I don’t know.” Finally stepping back, he
looked down at the floor. He was afraid if he
looked into her eyes, he’d lose it completely.
“He’s been in surgery for two hours. They haven’t
told me anything.” He paused, his throat thick and
his eyes burning. “I can’t do this again, Sheil. I
can’t. It’ll kill me if I lose…”
She rubbed his arm. “Let me see what I can find
out.”
She turned and walked away, and Matt
collapsed wearily into the hard chair, his hands
over his face. She was back in less than five
minutes. He looked at her, unable to help himself
but terrified of what he might see in her eyes.
“He’s holding his own.” She gripped his hand,
her gaze reassuring. “They’ve been able to repair
the tear in his aorta—”
Matt stiffened. “Isn’t that his heart?”
“It’s the artery that leads to his heart.
Fortunately, the tear was very small. Now they’re
working on the hole in his lung. But, listen to me,
Matt. He’s holding his own.”
Matt exhaled, nodding, but his chest still felt
like there was a metal band around it, squeezing
his heart.
“I’ve called Aidan,” Sheila went on. “She said
she’ll be on the next plane.”
“Thanks,” Matt muttered. “I didn’t even think of
that.”
“You’ve had your hands full.”
They sat in silence for a long time, Matt’s mind
racing in circles. “How did you even know to
come here? I haven’t had the time to call anyone.”
“Someone down in the ER recognized you, and
knew you were my brother-in-law. She called me,
figuring you could use some moral support.”
Matt nodded, his eyes going once again to the
floor.
“So, it was Garrett Preston who killed the little
girl,” Sheila said softly. “It’s all over the news.
You and Kiernan are heroes.”
“Yeah, I’ll just bet the department thinks so.”
“Actually, Captain Branson has been very
complimentary.” Sheila’s lips quirked. “Of course,
to do anything else would make him look like an
enormous ass. Oh, and they’ve arrested those two
detectives who showed up at my house.
Apparently they were in collusion with Preston.
He was paying them.”
“I’m not surprised,” Matt said, his voice flat.
“Too bad about the younger one, though. I’m
betting he got caught up in it because he’s
Conrad’s partner.”
“Exactly.”
Matt heard the deep voice about the time he
spotted the dark shoes in front of him. He jerked
his head up to find Ed Partridge standing near his
chair. He had a small half-smile around his lips,
and his eyes were kind.
“How you holding up there, Bennett?”
“I’m all right.” Matt stood and shook Ed’s hand.
“How are things?”
“Damned interesting,” Ed said. “Not every day I
get to bust a crooked ADA, even though he is
nuttier than a fruitcake. To see my boss have to eat
a huge helping of humble pie was a bonus. Does
the old heart good, days like this one.”
“You arrested Preston, then? Did you get the
whole story?”
“Karen Reynolds was more than happy to tell us
everything she knew, and Preston was lucid
enough to confess to the murder of Abigail
Reynolds. Of course, when he started talking about
a ghost attacking him with fireplace ashes, we sort
of took that part with a grain of salt.” He gave Matt
a faint smirk. “Care to corroborate his story?”
“What did Karen say?” he asked instead.
Ed’s grin deepened. “That she thinks Mr.
Preston is deeply disturbed.”
“I think I’ll agree with her assessment.”
“I rather thought you would. And now I get to
take the good news down to the tombs and tell Mr.
Reynolds he’ll be home in time for New Year’s
Eve.”
“I’m sure he’ll be glad to hear it.”
“I’m sure he will. And Conrad and Irvine will
probably be doing a stretch as well, but I think
Irvine’s will be less, considering he got led into it
by the senior partner.” He paused. “So when did
you plan to tell us someone had already taken a
shot at you?”
Sheila gasped. “What?”
Matt didn’t look at her. “When I could prove
who it was. Conrad, I’m guessing.”
“Right in one. He sang like a bird once he heard
Preston had sold him out. The dumb fuck. I never
did like that guy.” Ed clapped Matt lightly on the
shoulder. “Nice work, Detective. I’m sure you’ll
be hearing from Branson shortly, telling you to
come back whenever you feel ready.”
Matt nodded, but he wasn’t sure he’d ever feel
ready.
Ed left to deliver the good news to Marc
Reynolds. Matt reclaimed his miserable chair.
Another hour went by, and then another. At one
point Sheila told him it was nearly 6 a.m. and she
was heading out to find a cup of coffee, but Matt
scarcely heard her.
He closed his eyes, trying to quiet his mind, to
no avail. His thoughts spun one on top of another,
over and over, the most prominent being
he cannot
die…he cannot die…
He drifted off to sleep using
the words as his mantra.
He cannot die… He cannot die…
* * *
He was sitting on the hard plastic chair outside of
surgery, still waiting for news of Kiernan, when he
felt a soft touch on his hand. He looked up, and
Abby Reynolds smiled at him, her cornflower-blue
eyes wide, her burnished ringlets brushing her
shoulders. She was wearing a pretty white ruffled
party dress and she was holding a toy unicorn with
a striped horn in her arms. She sat next to him, her
feet in white ruffled socks and shiny white patent
leather shoes which didn’t touch the floor.
“I’m going to go now,” she said without
prompting. “It’s time. Kiernan told me what to do.”
“He did?” Matt said, unaccountably saddened.
She nodded, and her curls bounced. “I’ll miss
you,” he said, and found it was the truth.
“I’ll miss you, too. You’re my friend. You and
Kiernan.”
“I’m glad.” And he was.
“Check on my mommy sometimes, will you?
She’s going to be lonely for a while. At least until
my little brother gets here. He’ll make her feel
better.”