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Authors: Lisa Gardner

BOOK: Crash & Burn
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An hour before, Kevin and a couple guys from the TAR team had wrapped up mapping the scene with the Total Station. Add that data to the info from the vehicle's EDR and Wyatt was hoping they'd have a nice, neat blueprint of single-car accident 101.

“Nice prints,” Huntoon observed now, gesturing to a pair of bloody handprints on the front dash.

Wyatt nodded. It was true. Vehicles were notoriously tricky to fingerprint. Too much overlay and not enough viable surface. His personal favorite was to print the inside lid of the glove compartment box. Steering wheels, doors, gear shift, mostly yielded garbage. But the inside lid of the glove compartment . . . nice, smooth plastic. Generally accessed only a few times by a few people. He'd scored some lovely incriminating prints from the glove box in his time. Things cops were proud of.

“Blood testing?” Huntoon was asking, indicating the gory mess smearing the driver's side door.

“Gonna let you guys do the honors. Whole door will ship out later tonight. Probably tear out big chunks of the dash as well. Less dilution that way.”

Huntoon nodded in agreement. Taking a blood sample involved swabbing it with sterile water, which in turn diluted it. In this day and age of modern forensics, a good cop didn't just find evidence; he protected it.

“Female driver?” Huntoon asked.

“Yep.”

Huntoon gestured through the shattered windshield to the driver's seat. “Seat setup looks similar to mine, about right for an average-size woman.”

Wyatt crossed behind the vehicle so he was standing outside the driver's side door. Huntoon was right about the seat position, and now was as good a time as any to consider the rest of the driver-side setup.

“Seat belt is spooled, so I'm assuming it was on,” he said. “Mirrors . . .”

Mirrors were hard to tell. Ideally you needed to sit in the driver's seat, but given the amount of broken glass, let alone that neither door would open, that was impossible. Wyatt eyeballed it now, would return to it later when they'd removed the doors.

He bent this way, crooked his head that way. “Appear to make sense.”

Huntoon joined him in the juxtapositioning-the-mirrors game. “Nothing looks off to me.”

Her machine beeped. She crossed back over to consult the screen.

Wyatt finished up his brief assessment. “So seat setup, mirror placement, all consistent with female driver five four to five six. Nothing yet to indicate anyone else in the vehicle. In fact, we have
a search dog who would swear the driver was the lone occupant. And now you're going to tell me . . . ?”

“Stability control was deactivated.”

“What?” Wyatt drew up short. Of all the things he'd thought Huntoon was going to read off her data collector, that wasn't it.

“This model has stability control. You know, to help the vehicle autocorrect if the driver goes into a skid, takes a corner too hot, that kind of thing. The vehicle's computer senses the potential threat and will take over braking and/or deceleration on its own. Except in this vehicle, where the stability control had been shut off.”

“Manual override button?” Wyatt asked, as that was his memory with these high-end cars. They gaveth, but the driver could taketh away. Again, according to his memory, because God knows he'd never get to experience such vehicles on his salary, some drivers preferred an edgier experience. They wanted to push the limits of the car's high-end capabilities without the computer's self-preservation instinct kicking in.

“Exactly.” Huntoon looked at him. “Your female an adrenaline junkie?”

“I have no idea.”

“Vehicle was traveling at approximately thirty to thirty-five miles an hour,” Huntoon read off next. “But get this: no rpms.”

Wyatt stared at the officer. “Engine was in idle.”

“Gear shift's in neutral.” Huntoon nodded her head toward the shifter, which they could both see in the front. Wyatt had observed its position earlier; he'd simply assumed the driver herself had knocked the vehicle out of gear.

“How does a car achieve thirty-five miles an hour while in neutral?” Wyatt asked in confusion.

“Gotta be some hill,” Huntoon said, looking at the road above them.

“Yeah. Or some push.”

Huntoon glanced up again, her dark eyes considering. “That would do it. Still thinking accident?”

Wyatt said simply. “Ah, shit.”

Chapter 9

I
NVEST
IGATOR
TESSA
LEONI
regarded her reflection critically in the mirror. She was not a woman prone to overanalyzing her wardrobe. In the beginning of her career, the state of Massachusetts had been kind enough to take care of the matter for her—each and every shift she'd turned out in state police blues. After the incident, when she and the state had agreed it was mutually beneficial to part ways, she'd become a corporate security specialist. Which, best she could tell, involved trading in her dark blue uniform for navy-blue Ann Taylor suits. Maybe once you wore blue, there was no going back.

Tessa grimaced, did her best not to think about the obvious comparison. Such as once a cop, always a cop. Except, of course, she wasn't.

All in all, she was doing well, she reminded herself. Her daughter was happy, at least as happy as a cautious, hard-eyed, constantly on-the-alert, recovering-from-trauma child could be. Mrs. Ennis, their former neighbor and now live-in font of all wisdom, was happy, not to mention cooking up a storm with a little help from cable TV.

And . . . And Wyatt.

Tessa hadn't expected to date again. Let alone discover a man she respected, found attractive, and actually trusted. He accepted her, all of her, including a history that included allegedly shooting her own husband. Not just any man could do that.

And it's not that Sophie truly hated him. At least, not any more than any other man.

Tessa sighed, returned her attention to her attire. Navy-blue suit. Sharply tailored jacket coupled with matching straight-legged slacks. She looked taller, leaner, tougher.

All good things when having lunch with Boston detective D. D. Warren.

Why was she doing this again?

Because it was her job and she was a professional and she could handle this.

Tessa's stomach clenched. She felt nervous and resented the sensation. She and the good detective had a history. For starters, D.D. was the one who'd investigated the shooting death of Tessa's husband. But the two women had managed to work together—kind of—to track a missing family a while back.

Whether D.D. appreciated it or not, Tessa had once worn the uniform. She remembered the isolation of being a female cop. And probably more than anyone, she could understand what D.D., with her recent injury, was going through now.

Hence, lunch.

Tessa finished fussing with the collar of her plain white shirt. She looked less like a corporate security consultant and more like a federal agent. But that was okay. She wore what she wore. She was who she was.

Tessa was not a woman who harbored illusions. There were good things in her life—Sophie, Mrs. Ennis, Wyatt and, hell, maybe one day a puppy. But there were also other things. Decisions made, actions taken, that could not be undone. She still bore the scars; she still suffered the nightmares.

And yes, she did wonder: Did a woman like her deserve to be happy?

She looked at her daughter, and she didn't know how to want anything less.

Which meant for now, she would be a grown-up and take a wounded detective to lunch.

*   *   *

T
ESSA
ARRIVED
AT
Legal Sea Foods in the Pru Center fifteen minutes early. She hoped to choose the table, preferably one in the corner, and set the stage.

Of course, she found D.D. already waiting. At a corner table. Back to the wall. She rose slightly when Tessa was led over by the hostess. The detective moved easily enough; Tessa had to look for the weakness to spot it, the way the detective held her left arm against her ribs a shade too tight.

They shook hands, professionals. D.D. was wearing her signature caramel-colored leather jacket, with wide-legged tan slacks and a deep teal–colored button-down shirt. Man's shirt; Tessa would bet money on it. Further evidence the good detective wasn't back to fully functional. But her short golden locks retained their usual level of wild curl. Woman still had some fight left in her, then.

Good, Tessa thought. She was looking forward to it.

“How's Jack?” Tessa asked, taking the seat across from D.D., with her back to the room. Jack was D.D.'s young son. Two, three years old? Where did the time go?

“He's going through a nursery rhyme stage. We read a lot of Mother Goose, sing lullabies. Sophie?” D.D. asked.

“Good. Into gymnastics, tae kwon do and target shooting.”

D.D. was regarding her with a faint smile. “I hear other rumors as well. You and the New Hampshire sergeant Wyatt Foster? Thought there was some chemistry during the Denbe case.”

“We've been dating six months.”

“Nice. Introduced him to Sophie yet?”

Tessa hesitated; she couldn't help herself. D.D. arched an inquiring brow.

“We tried two outings,” Tessa confessed. “Mostly . . . she stared at him. You know, the way you and I might regard a serial killer or registered sex offender. She was never sassy or disrespectful . . . but I wouldn't have blamed Wyatt for running for the hills. Sophie can be very intense.”

“They should build something together,” D.D. recommended. “Wyatt's a carpenter, right? Maybe he can teach her how to make something. Sophie will suffer his presence for the sake of the power tools, and in the meantime, maybe some of Wyatt's laid-back New Hampshire charm will work its magic. They'll bond.”

“Pretty good for a woman with a little boy.”

“As a detective you have to be prepared for all kinds of evil. Even nine-year-old girls.”

D.D. picked up her menu. Tessa followed suit. The waitress came; they placed their orders. Shrimp for Tessa, clam chowder and baked cod for D.D. They both drank water. Then it was time to get down to business.

“Heard about your arm,” Tessa said, gesturing to D.D.'s stiff posture. The detective had recently suffered an on-the-job injury to her left arm. Rumor mill was it was serious and ongoing. As in she might never again be fit for duty. The department had a heart about such things. Most likely, the detective would be offered a desk. Except D.D., like Tessa, wasn't a woman meant for sitting.

“Figured as much.” D.D. eyed her sharply. “Here to talk to me about my future employment opportunities?”

“Never hurts to know,” Tessa responded mildly. “And it must not hurt to listen, given that you agreed to lunch.”

D.D. gave a single-shouldered shrug, maybe not totally convinced, but not arguing either. “Do you like what you do?” she asked, clearly curious.

“More than I thought I would. For example, working the Denbe case . . . an entire family gone missing, racing against all odds to find them. You and I, we do best in situations that provide a challenge, as well as a sense of purpose.”

“Kind of an extreme case. Where you got a lot of help from the BPD, I might add.”

“You'd be amazed how many extreme cases exist in corporate America. You have money, egos, and world domination at stake. People can get a little nuts.”

“You like it.”

“I do. Which, I'll be the first to say, surprised me. And to be honest, the hours are better. My daughter knows that nine times out of ten, I'm coming home for dinner. And watching her game on the weekend. And getting four weeks' paid vacation a year, while earning a salary that lets us spend that time someplace sunny.”

“Now you're just being mean.”

“It's true. My job is superior to yours in every way.”

“Not every way.”

“Highly challenging, incredibly lucrative, and family friendly. Tell me what working for a corporate security firm can't offer you.”

“Phil,” D.D. said simply. “And Neil. My squad mates. You've always been a lone wolf, Tessa. Whereas I've always loved my team.”

*   *   *

T
HEIR
LUNCHES
ARRIVED
shortly. They made small talk, caught up on mutual acquaintances. Bobby Dodge, a state police detective, was doing well. Still married to Annabelle, now had three kids, just bought a fixer-upper out in the burbs. Big yard, D.D. reported. Kind of place perfect for a swimming pool, trampoline and summer barbecues. Oh, and they'd gotten a puppy, an Australian cattle dog. Most likely to herd the kids.

Around and around she and D.D. went, exchanged stories on people they knew, cases they'd worked. Until lunch was done, Tessa had charged it to her corporate card and they were back to the matter at hand.

“You'll think about it?” Tessa said at last. “Maybe come in for a sit-down interview? Never hurts to know what's out there.”

D.D. nodded. Her love of her team aside, if she couldn't pass the fitness-for-duty test, she was done as a cop. Tessa was offering her a lifeline by even considering her for Northledge Investigations, and they both knew it.

“Speaking of dogs, state has a new development on an old case,” D.D. said as they rose to standing.

“Oh yeah?”

“Guy was out playing with his dog,” D.D. said, “tossing a stick for him in a nearby stream, when he happened to notice a small black handgun beneath the water. He turned it in to the police; the lab matched the pistol to the bullet used to kill John Stephen Purcell. You know, that hit man murdered three years ago.”

Tessa didn't say anything.

“Just got me thinking,” D.D. said casually. “There are still a lot of unanswered questions from that night—”

“My daughter's doing just fine,” Tessa interjected curtly.

“I don't begrudge that. I don't.” D.D. shook her head. “But, Tessa, you and I . . . You're right. We're meant to be doing things. Hell, we're meant to be wearing badges. And the kind of people who wear the shield are supposed to uphold the system, honor the law. There are lines that shouldn't be crossed. And you—”

D.D. broke off. What she suspected, she could never prove, and they both knew it. While Tessa remained silent, because what she had done she was never going to say, and they both knew it.

“I'm not trying to threaten you,” D.D. said at last.

“Then what are you trying to do?”

“Give you a heads-up. Rumor is, lab geeks recovered a print. No statute of limitations on homicide, right? Meaning if new evidence is recovered . . .”

She didn't have to say the rest. Tessa understood.

D.D. stepped away from the table. “The Purcell case isn't the BPD's,” she remarked, as they headed through the restaurant, toward the front doors. “State assigned it to a new guy, Detective Rick Stein. Word on the street is he's a supercop, the kind of guy who hates open cases and unanswered questions. I'm sure you'll be hearing from him soon enough.”

“Fair enough,” Tessa said.

“You could come forward, volunteer information now,” the detective suggested.

Tessa merely shot her a look.

“You're still a lone wolf, Tessa,” D.D. remarked softly, as they pushed through the doors.

“I never got to work with your squad mates,” Tessa answered.

D.D. merely smiled. “Thanks for lunch. I'll think about it.”

They went their separate ways.

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