Authors: Lisa Jackson
Tags: #Romance
So what had happened to the baby?
So far, no one had a clue.
Abby frowned. She pushed her plate aside and folded her arms over the table. “I’ve searched all the birth and adoption records for the fifteen years between my birth and my mother’s death. If she had a baby, it would have had to have been in those years. I came up with zip. What about you?”
“Nothing.” The department, of course, had nothing. No crime had ever been reported, so Montoya had phoned an old poker buddy, an ex-cop who was now a private detective. “I talked to Graziano last week, and he hadn’t found anything. But he’s still looking.”
“The only way we’ll find out anything is to go through all the hospital records.”
“Our Lady of Virtues was a private institution.”
“So? There have to be records. Somewhere.” She picked up her plate and carried it to the sink. Hershey was only a step behind. “And someone knows about them.”
He knew where this was heading, and he didn’t like it. “The church.”
“Bingo.”
He picked up his plate and set it on the counter next to the sink, where she was running water. “You want me to talk to the nuns out there?”
“You don’t have to do it. I will.”
“Abby,” he said softly, touching her arm so that she glanced up at him. “Maybe it’s time to let this go.”
“You want me to just forget that I have a brother or sister that I’ve never met?”
“The baby might not have made it.” They’d been over this ground before, but as always, she was stubborn as hell.
“Then let’s find out, okay?” She wiped her hands on a dishtowel and tossed it at him. He caught it with one hand as she pointed a long finger at his nose. “Look, Detective, I’m getting to the bottom of this. I can’t go on living the rest of my life not knowing. So either you help me or I go it alone. Your choice.”
“Okay, okay. I know. I’m with you.”
“Good.”
“I’m just telling you we might not find anything, or, if we do, you might not like it.”
“So what else is new?” She let out her breath and held up both hands. “Hey, sorry. I didn’t mean to pick a fight.”
“You didn’t.”
She smothered a smile. “I tried.”
“And failed miserably,” he teased.
“You’re impossible.”
“At least.” He snapped the towel at her rear. “Besides, I’ll get even with you later.”
“What? In the bedroom?” she asked, eyes widening in mock horror. Splaying the fingers of one hand over her chest, she added, “Whatever do you have in mind?”
“You’ll see…”
To his surprise, she reached around him, unclipped the small case attached to his belt, and in one swift motion dangled the metal cuffs in front of his face as she kissed the lobe of his ear. Her teeth scraped the diamond stud he always wore. “And so will you, Detective….”
CHAPTER 6
T
he Reviver was agitated. Ready. Every nerve screaming through his body.
It was time.
At last.
He couldn’t wait.
Anticipation propelled him. Bloodlust snaked through his veins.
On silent footsteps, he crept through the undergrowth and followed a sagging, dilapidated fence line. Dressed for battle, his weapons belted to his body, he edged ever closer to his prey. A fine mist rose, adding another layer of camouflage to the already dark night.
In the distance, across a lonely field, he spied the farmhouse, windows glowing faintly. His pulse quickened. He told himself to be careful, to tread lightly; he didn’t want to make a mistake and suffer the wrath of the Voice.
Not this time.
God had spoken to him, and His instructions were clear.
Stealthily he slipped around a spindly pine tree.
A sharp hiss cut through the night.
His hand went to the knife at his belt before his eyes adjusted and he spied the thick, furry body of a raccoon. It had reared up on its hind legs, its nasty little teeth bared, its masked eyes glaring at him defiantly.
Stupid animal.
It would serve the fucker right if he sliced its throat, killed the damned creature out of spite and left it for vultures and crows.
But he couldn’t risk anything that wasn’t planned. He had to remain focused. His orders had been succinct. The Voice of God had been specific and strong, telling him exactly what to do while the other irritating, whining voices had buzzed like white noise. The killing would begin soon enough.
Eyes glittering, the raccoon lowered itself onto all fours and lumbered awkwardly deeper into the underbrush and brambles, as if it hadn’t known how close it had come to death. His lips curled, and his fingers itched to grab his hunting knife.
Good riddance.
As the vermin disappeared from sight, he focused his attention to the house where his victim was waiting.
Unknowing.
With renewed purpose, he stretched the sagging barbed wire, slid through the opening, then took off at an easy jog across the open field. The night was cool for May. Rising clouds of mist swirled from the damp ground, and the air was fresh and clean from the recent rain, filling his nostrils with the smell of moist earth.
It had been a long, rewarding day.
And he’d caught glimpses of her.
Eve.
Beautiful.
Seductive.
Deadly.
Oh, to want her, to feel her pliant, soft body beneath his. To smell her. Taste her. Feel the heat of her skin rubbing anxiously, eagerly against him. He would love to hear her moan, see her writhe in fear and ecstasy as he mounted her, claimed her, thrust so deep into her she’d gasp and the cords of her beautiful neck would stand out…inviting. He would do anything he wanted to her beautiful body, and she would accept him, understand their destiny. She would kneel before him, licking her already wet lips…ready to take him in.
He felt his cock twitch, threatening to harden, and he clamped his jaw tight.
There was no time for this kind of fantasy, not yet.
Later…Oh, yes, later…
For now, he had to concentrate.
He had work to do.
She would wait.
He knew where she was.
Earlier, he’d followed her. After assuring himself that she had indeed driven into the city and not to this remote farmhouse, he’d turned off the freeway on the outskirts of New Orleans, doubling back a bit and driving unerringly to a spot where he could park his truck. His pickup was now hidden behind a dilapidated old barn on a forgotten piece of soggy farmland near the swamp.
From the truck’s hiding place, he’d walked nearly two miles through thickets, woods, and open pasture. He’d seen the massive dark shapes of dozing cattle, startled a flock of sheep into bleating for a few seconds before he’d slipped from their pasture, and crossed two streams, ever intent upon his mission.
The Voice had warned him that there might be a dog guarding the premises. If so, he would take care of the mutt as easily as he would kill his victim. The Reviver would have to be wary. He slipped his bowie knife from its leather sheath then held it in his mouth.
Through the thin veil of fog, he loped up a small rise to the far side of the pastureland and spied an aluminum gate. Too noisy to open or climb over. Again he stretched the wire between the fence posts and slipped noiselessly to the other side.
He paused.
Listened.
Stared into the darkness.
He sensed no one outside, heard only the sound of his own heartbeat and the soft sigh of the wind rustling the branches of a willow tree and causing an ancient windmill to creak as the wooden blades slowly turned.
The house was only thirty feet away.
The porch light was off, but there was no dark shape lying near the door, no sound of a dog padding in the darkness, no smell of canine feces or urine or hair.
Ever wary, his hand on the hilt of his knife, the Reviver walked noiselessly through the weeds then hurried across parallel ruts of a gravel and dirt drive. At the garage he paused, every muscle tense. Slowly he swept his gaze over the unlit floorboards and stairs of the back porch. Still no mutt was visible.
Good. He pulled on a pair of thin black gloves and stretched his fingers. Then the waiting was over.
On the balls of his feet, he silently crept up the stairs to the back door. Paused. Checked the windows, peering through the glass. The kitchen itself was dark, but enough light spilled into the room from the hall. The room was neat. Uncluttered. Except for the bottle of whiskey, uncapped and sitting on the counter. Good. Just as expected. The Reviver moved his gaze slowly over the rest of the neat expanse and located the tiny light glowing on an area that was obviously used for a desk. Plugged into an outlet and next to an open notebook that was either a calendar or day planner or the like was a cell-phone charger with the phone inserted, the tiny red light glowing like a beacon.
He moved to the door.
Above the thin doorjamb he found a hidden key.
Just as the Voice had told him.
Barely breathing, the Reviver inserted the key.
With only the tiniest click of metal against metal, the lock gave way and the door swung open on well-oiled hinges.
Perfect.
He pocketed the key and took his knife from his mouth, holding it ready. Barely breathing, he stepped over the threshold and into the dark kitchen.
He was inside.
Eve made the call.
Dressed in her cotton nightgown and robe, she stood in the kitchen, warming one hand on a cup of green tea and holding her cell phone to her ear with the other. She’d promised Anna Maria she’d phone, and even though it was closing in on eleven, she was going to make good.
“Hello?” Anna’s voice was clear and chipper. Of course. She was a night owl, always had been, and didn’t understand people who rose before dawn.
“Hey, it’s me. I made it back. Safe and sound.”
“I was beginning to wonder,” Anna said.
“Tell Kyle.”
“I will, when he gets back.”
“He’s not there?”
“Uh-uh. He just missed you this morning, ran into the house, took one call, and left not long after you did. Some emergency at work. A breakdown of some computer system he set up for a local bank. They suffered a major crash. Their entire system is down, and with all of the identity fraud and scams out there, the owner of the bank freaked. Insisted all of the computers in every branch have to be up and operational by the time the bank opens tomorrow, so Kyle’ll be pulling an all-nighter.”
“You’d think they’d have a backup system.”
“Probably do, but Kyle’s their guy.” She sounded totally disgusted with the situation.
“Bummer.”
“Don’t get me started.”
Eve didn’t dare. She knew the drill. As much as Anna professed to believe in wedded bliss, her own marriage was a train wreck; she was just too stubborn and too Catholic to do anything about it. “Listen, I’m about ready to call it a day, so I’ll talk to you later.”
“Have you called your father?”
“No,” Eve said quickly then bit her tongue. She and Terrence Renner hadn’t been on good terms for a long while. “I’ll call him in the morning.”
“Right after you get the puppy?”
“What? Oh.” Eve smiled at Anna’s clever way of calling her a liar. “No, right before.”
Anna laughed. “Good. I’ll talk to you in a couple of days. Bye.”
“Bye,” Eve said, but the connection was already severed. Anna had hung up.
Making a face, Eve considered dialing her father and letting him know she was in New Orleans then decided it could wait until morning. Even if he were still awake, Terrence would have already downed a couple of stiff drinks.
She’d prefer to talk to him when he was sober.
Adding a little hot water from the kettle to her cup, Eve sipped at her tea then stared some more at the newspaper articles still scattered over the scarred oak table.
You should go to the police.
She read the clippings over again, taking mental notes. Faith Chastain’s obituary, over twenty years old, was included, and within it were the names of the loved ones she’d left behind: her husband, Jacques, and two daughters, Zoey and Abigail.
Abby Chastain.
Why did that name ring a dim bell?
Who had done this? How? There was no evidence that her car had been broken into. No windows smashed, no locks pried or jimmied. It was almost as if someone had used her own key to get inside.
A duplicate?
Her insides turned to ice. If someone had somehow gotten hold of her key ring, then any of her keys could have been copied, including the keys to this house.
She heard a scrape.
The sound of a fingernail sliding against glass.
Her heart clutched before she realized that it was the sound of a branch against a window on the second floor. Still, she dropped her cup onto the counter, and tea slopped over the sides of the rim. She didn’t care. She ran up the stairs, stopping at the landing. Sure enough, the wind had picked up, rattling the limbs of the trees outside, causing a small branch to rasp against the glass. That’s what she’d heard. No one was trying to get in.
Forcing her pulse to slow and her mind to think clearly, Eve concentrated on the keys.
Don’t go there, Eve! Don’t think anyone can let himself into your house at will. Your keys were never stolen. They were never missing. Someone slipped into your car when you inadvertently left it unlocked. And they did it today. You know that. Otherwise you would have found the packet earlier, when you put your sunglasses into the glove box.
She tried to think dispassionately about the guy in the wraparound shades. She’d panicked at the sight of him, imagined him to be the embodiment of evil tracking her down. When she’d calmed down a bit, she’d blown off her fear as the bothersome result of an overactive imagination, but was it really? Could he be the culprit, the one who’d left her the clippings?
If only she’d seen his license plate.
“Get a grip,” she said, then nearly tripped on Samson, who was lying on the bottom step. “Careful there, guy.” She picked him up and carried him back to the kitchen.
Turn these clippings in to the police.
Eve grimaced. The local detectives already thought she was at least three cards shy of a full deck. Taking in this bundle of news articles would only up the ante on the theory that whatever brains she once had were destroyed when a bullet ricocheted against her skull.
Maybe the police could pull off fingerprints, find out who broke into your car and left the envelope in the glove box.
All too clearly Eve remembered the harsh, no-nonsense visages of Detectives Montoya and Bentz and the skepticism of the Assistant District Attorney who had been chosen to prosecute Cole.
“You’re certain about this?” ADA Yolinda Johnson had asked Eve, her dark eyes narrowing. She was a slim, smart African-American woman of about thirty-five who wasn’t about to walk into the courtroom without all of her facts straight and her ducks in a row. Eve was seated on one side of a large desk, Yolinda on the other. The office was small and close, no window open, and Eve had been sweating, her pain medication beginning to wear off. “Mr. Dennis shot you.”
“Yes.” Eve’s insides had been in knots, and she’d worried a thumb against the knuckle of her index finger.
“But you don’t remember anything before or after the attack, is that right?” Yolinda had clearly been skeptical, her lips pursing as she tapped the eraser end of a pencil on the legal pad lying faceup on the desk.
Eve’s stomach tightened. “That’s…that’s right.…I mean, I remember being with Cole at his house—”
“In his bed, Ms. Renner. Let’s not mince words. The defense attorney certainly won’t.”
Eve’s head snapped up, and she met the other woman’s gaze evenly. “That’s right. We’d been in bed.”
“You were lovers.”
“Yes.”
“Go on.”
“I received a call from Roy…Roy Kajak. He was insistent we meet. He said he had some kind of ‘evidence,’ whatever that meant. But then…then it gets kind of blurry.”
“Mr. Dennis didn’t want you to go.”
“That’s right.”
“He barred the door.”
“Yes…”
“Did he follow you?”
“I don’t know.”
“Did you see him leave the house?”
“I…I don’t think so.”
“But you’re not sure, are you?” the assistant DA had accused, leaning forward across the desk.
“No.”
“So it’s all a blur. Until you saw Cole Dennis leveling a gun at you through the window.”
“Yes.”
“Even though it was dark.”
“Yes!” Eve’s guts had seemed to shred.
Yolinda frowned, her lips rolling in on each other. Her pencil tapped an unhappy tattoo. She stared at Eve a long minute that had seemed punctuated by the ticking of a clock on the credenza behind her neat desk. “Look, I’m not going to sugarcoat this, okay? The jury will understand why you don’t remember anything after the shooting. You were wounded. Passed out. Unconscious. That works. But possessing no memory leading up to that moment in time is a problem.”