Amnesia (17 page)

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Authors: Beverly Barton

Tags: #Courtroom Drama, #Fiction

BOOK: Amnesia
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“More than likely,” Griffin replied. “But Lulu also saw quite a bit of another man, but of course, we can rule him out.”

“Why’s that?” Quinn asked.

Annabelle knew the answer. “Because that man was Wythe.”

“Yes,” Griffin said. “One of the men she spent time with was her brother.”

“One of the men?” Quinn asked.

“She didn’t see much of the other man, but we have reason to believe that they had a sexual relationship and that they had sex at least once, about six weeks ago.”

“Then he could be the father of Lulu’s baby,” Quinn said. “Who is he?”

“Aaron Tully.” Griffin watched Quinn for a reaction.

“Who is Aaron Tully?” Annabelle sensed that the name meant something to Quinn.

“Lulu was sleeping with Aaron?” Quinn shot up off the sofa. “Where the hell did you get your information?”

“Aaron Tully is Quinn’s employee, a sort of valet/butler cum gofer,” Griffin explained. “As for where we got that information—Quinn’s personal assistant, Marcy Sims, claims that she caught them in the act one afternoon when Lulu was in Nashville visiting.” Griffin glanced at Quinn. “When you were in court one day, Lulu and Aaron had sex…in your bed.”

Quinn stomped around the room for a couple of minutes, then stopped and laughed. “It’s a wonder he survived Lulu, a kid like him. She had a way of chewing a man up and spitting him out in little pieces if he didn’t know how to protect himself.”

Griffin cleared his throat. “Are you forgetting that Lulu was Annabelle’s cousin?”

Quinn’s eyes closed to mere slits as he focused on Annabelle. “You have no illusions where Lulu’s concerned, do you? You know what she was, how she treated people, especially men. Lulu had no respect for a man unless he could give as good as he got. She was a man-eater. If I’d known she was sniffing around Aaron, I’d have tried to protect him from her.”

“I’m well aware of the fact that Lulu was no saint, but…” There are reasons she was the way she was, Annabelle wanted to shout. But she didn’t. Some things should remain secret. For the sake of the family, this one secret would go to the grave with Lulu. “If she slept with Tully, then he could be the father of her baby. We’ll have to tell the police. They’ll want a DNA sample from him, too.”

“Griffin can inform Lieutenant Norton,” Quinn said. “I
trust Norton. But even if it turns out Aaron was the father, the police can’t pin Lulu’s murder on him.”

“Why not?” Annabelle asked.

“Because he wasn’t in Memphis when Lulu was killed. He was on a plane with Marcy Sims and Jace Morgan heading back to Houston that Friday night.”

“As a matter of fact, he wasn’t,” Griffin told them. “The three didn’t actually travel together to Houston that night.” Griffin stood, bent over and picked up the file folder. After leafing through it, he pulled out several sheets of paper. “Ms. Sims took a late night flight out of Nashville, leaving at ten-fifty. Tully and Morgan took a morning flight.”

“I don’t understand,” Quinn said. “I thought all three of them went back to Houston together Friday night. They didn’t mention anything about Marcy taking a separate flight and Jace and Aaron not leaving Nashville until Saturday morning.”

“Any reason why they should have told you?” Griffin inserted the pages back into the file folder and laid it on the table. “They were off duty, weren’t they? Don’t you usually give them a vacation of sorts after you’ve won a big case like the McBryar trial?”

“Yeah, sure. And what they do in their free time isn’t any of my business, as long as they keep their noses clean. You probably already know that all three of them were kids in trouble with the law before they came to work for me. But I’m telling you right now that Aaron might have fooled around with Lulu, but there’s no way in hell that boy is capable of murder.”

“Would you stake your life on it?” Griffin asked.

Chapter 11

Griffin excused himself and went into the bedroom to take a telephone call, leaving Annabelle and Quinn alone. Quinn could tell by the way she wouldn’t look directly at him and by the stiffness of her spine that the lovely Ms. Vanderley felt decidedly uncomfortable. The very fact that she was not only unavailable, but also completely unresponsive to his charm made her all the more intriguing. She posed a challenge to him, on every conceivable level.

“Do you suppose that call will take long?” she asked, but glanced anywhere but at him.

“Depends,” Quinn replied. “If it’s personal, it could take a while. If it’s business, it’ll depend on who called and what they have to say.”

“Aren’t lawyers capable of one-word answers?”

Quinn chuckled.

She hazarded a glance his way. He took full advantage of the moment by smiling at her and gazing into her big blue eyes. He figured she’d look away and do her best to avoid making a direct connection to him; but she surprised him. She kept her gaze linked to his. A strange undercurrent swept through him, drawing him deeper and deeper into unknown
waters. What was it about Annabelle that not only fascinated him, but also unnerved him?

She wasn’t centerfold material, the way Lulu had been. Annabelle was several inches shorter, a few pounds heavier, not as bosomy, but elegantly lovely. Her hair was a darker blond, probably natural, whereas Lulu had lightened hers to almost white. And where Lulu’s skin had been tan from hours spent in tanning beds and on beaches at private resorts around the world, Annabelle possessed a peaches-and-cream complexion.

“Do you suppose that phone call has anything to do with our case?” she asked.

“Our case?” Smiling, Quinn maintained eye contact as he rose from the sofa and walked toward Annabelle. She broke eye contact immediately and leaned back in her chair, her shoulders tensing, her spine stiffening. “You really hate having to share Griffin Powell with me, don’t you?”

“Yes.”

That one word said a great deal. For one thing it told him that Annabelle wouldn’t lie to him for the sake of courtesy or to spare his feelings. She might be a lady to whom good manners was of tantamount importance, but she could be direct and absolutely honest if the circumstances called for it.

“I’m sorry you’ve been put in this situation,” he said. “And you may not believe me when I say that we both want the same thing.”

“I want to find Lulu’s murderer and see him brought to justice.”

“That’s exactly what I want.”

“I’d like to believe you.”

Quinn knelt down in front of her and reached out to take her hands. She slid her hands on either side of her hips and drew them into tight little fists. “You really would like to believe me, wouldn’t you? You’d like to believe I didn’t kill Lulu,” he said. “I appreciate the fact that you aren’t convinced
I’m guilty. It means a lot to me that you’re willing to keep an open mind.”

“Why does my opinion matter one way or another?”

He clasped her chin, cradling it in the hollow between his thumb and forefinger. Gasping softly, she met his gaze head-on.

“Do you want the honest truth?” he asked.

“Yes.” Her voice quivered ever so slightly.

“I don’t know,” he admitted, then released his hold on her chin. Of their own accord, as if he had no control over them, his fingers glided gently down the side of her neck, pausing when he felt the beat of her pulse. “I usually don’t care what anybody thinks of me. I’ve always lived my life by my own rules and thumbed my nose at society. When you’re as rich and powerful as I am, people tend to cater to you, not the other way around. Being a Vanderley, you understand what I’m saying, don’t you? You’ve had people kowtowing to you all your life.”

Her pulse quickened as her heartbeat accelerated. He could feel her life’s blood pumping beneath his fingertips. She was either excited or agitated. Perhaps both.

“The difference between us, Mr. Cortez, is that having been born to wealth and privilege, I was taught at an early age not to abuse my wealth and power. My parents told me that with great privilege comes great obligations. I don’t live my life by my own rules and I do care what other people think of me.”

He eased his hand from her neck and moved across her shoulder. She trembled. He lifted his hand away, but remained kneeling in front of her. “Haven’t you ever wanted to break free? Don’t you sometimes dream of what it would be like to walk on the wild side, just once?”

She stared at him as if he were an alien creature speaking in an unknown tongue. Was she so totally buried in Vanderley tradition that she had lost the ability to think for herself? How was it possible that she and Lulu were first cousins? He’d never known two women as vastly different.

“What are you suggesting?” she finally managed to say.

“Take a chance. Throw caution to the winds. Trust me completely, Annabelle.”

“I can’t.”

“Yes, you can. You want to.” He stood up and held out his hand to her. “Tell me that you know I didn’t kill Lulu, then work with me to prove who did.”

She glared at his offered hand, then looked up at him. “We’re already working together to find Lulu’s murderer. Isn’t the fact that I agreed to be your partner in hiring Griffin enough for you? If I truly believed you’d killed Lulu, do you think I’d have done that?”

“Tell me. I need to hear you say it.” He hated the urgency in his voice, a pleading tone he hadn’t used since he was a kid. Was she aware of the fact that he was practically begging her to believe him? Until that very moment, he hadn’t realized how desperately he wanted Annabelle to believe in his innocence. And heaven help him, he honest-to-God didn’t know why.

She stood slowly, as if fighting a battle within herself. When she faced him, only inches separating them, she tilted forward as if her body was drawn to his by some invisible magnet.

“I don’t think you killed Lulu.”

He let out the breath he didn’t even know he’d been holding. Exhilaration welled up inside him. He couldn’t explain how he felt except to say it was as if he’d been given a rare and precious gift. Annabelle’s trust.

Quinn wanted to kiss her.
Don’t do it
, he told himself.
Don’t even attempt it. If you touch her, you’ll want more than a kiss
.

“Sorry about that,” Griffin Powell said as he came out of the bedroom.

Annabelle jumped as if she’d been shot and moved hurriedly away from Quinn. The tightly wound tension inside him momentarily coiled tighter and he had to fight the arousal that had been building since the moment he touched Annabelle.

Griffin glanced from Quinn to Annabelle. “Is everything all right in here?”

“Yes,” Annabelle replied.

“Was that phone call anything we need to know about?” Quinn asked, eager to change the subject and take his mind off how much he wanted Annabelle.

“Why don’t we all sit down,” Griffin suggested.

“What is it?” Annabelle asked. “Whatever it is, just tell us.”

“The
Commercial Appeal
is going to run an exposé on Lulu’s life in tomorrow’s paper,” Griffin said. “They’re going to show what they believe was the real Lulu, warts and all.”

“Oh, God!” Sudden tears glistened in Annabelle’s eyes. “How much do they know? And will they really print things about her personal life knowing the family will sue the paper?”

“They’re going to paint Lulu as a fun-loving party girl who handed out her sexual favors as if they were candy,” Griffin told them. “And my bet is they won’t print anything that can’t be substantiated. They will maintain that every word is the truth and not slander.”

“But why would they—?” Annabelle asked.

“To sell papers,” Griffin said, then looked right at Quinn. “And exposing the fact that Lulu had a legion of lovers will make it appear that Quinn, despite the fact he found her body, was only one man of many who
might
have had a motive to kill her.”

“Are you accusing me of something?” Quinn asked. “Like leaking this story to the newspaper?”

“The investigative reporter who’s doing the exposé on Lulu somehow found out that she was pregnant.” Griffin stayed focused on Quinn. “The police department or the ME’s office could have a loose-lipped employee, but according to my sources, someone in the law offices of Hamilton, Jeffreys, Lloyd and Wells made a phone call to the
Commercial Appeal
today.”

“Kendall?” Quinn didn’t want to believe that his friend
and lawyer—and his lover—would have done something that unethical, although it was something that under different circumstances, he might have done himself. In order to win, he’d always been willing to do whatever it took, no matter how underhanded or borderline illegal. “You think my lawyer leaked the news about Lulu’s pregnancy?”

“There’s no way to prove it, of course,” Griffin said. “But, yes, I think Kendall Wells is planning ahead, just in case you are charged with Lulu’s murder. She’s smearing Lulu’s reputation now and keeping her own hands clean, thereby keeping yours clean, too.”

“If Kendall did this—and I’m saying if—I didn’t know anything about it.” Quinn turned to Annabelle. “I swear to you that I had nothing—”

“I can’t do this right now.” Annabelle held up a protective hand, warning him to stay away from her. “I’m going back to my suite. I need to contact some of our people and see if we can stop this exposé from coming out. It’s possible we have enough pull to influence the publisher. If not, we’ll have to come up with some damage control.”

“Your cousin’s going to be exploited in the
Commercial Appeal
and your main concern is damage control for Vanderley, Inc.?” Quinn shook his head. “If that’s the case, then I think I’ve misjudged you. You’re not the woman I thought you were.”

She pinned him with a stern, rueful look. “I don’t give a damn what people think of Lulu because she apparently didn’t care. If she had, she would have lived her life differently. But I do care that if Uncle Louis finds out the truth about his precious little girl, it will break his heart. The damage control I mentioned isn’t to apply a Band-Aid to Lulu’s public image, but to somehow keep the news from reaching my uncle, and if that fails, to convince him that everything being said about Lulu is a pack of lies.”

Annabelle turned and practically ran to the door.

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