Colgate propped both hands on his hips. “You both need to be questioned.”
“Do not cross me right now.” She jabbed a finger at Colgate’s chest. Her eyes narrowed to fierce slits, and two bright spots colored her pale cheeks. “Lance almost died doing your job.” She waved a hand toward the road. “If we hadn’t gotten involved, both of those kids would have died today because you were too damned stubborn to listen.”
The sheriff leaned back, his face grim and maybe a little pale. Lance doubted anyone had called him out in a long time.
“As I already said, we’ll answer your questions after Lance has been treated.” Morgan’s nostrils flared. Lance had never seen her this angry. She was the articulate and tactful member of their team, the one he could count on to keep a clear head and use her brain under duress. She didn’t rail on people—that was his territory. But tonight, he was too exhausted to care about the sheriff at all. Colgate’s entire department needed to be rebuilt. They were running on half staff with no real leadership. They all knew it.
The sheriff backed away just a few inches. “All right, but your vehicle is evidence.”
“I’ll give you a ride.” Stella stepped between Morgan and the sheriff. She took her sister’s arm and steered her toward her unmarked police vehicle.
Her partner waved and said, “Go ahead. I’ll catch up later.”
“Come on, Lance.” Stella wrapped her free arm around Lance’s waist. “You’re a mess. Neither one of you should be driving anyway.”
“Don’t you want to stay and work the case?” Lance asked.
“Not really.” Stella opened the rear door of her car. “The case is solved, right? This is going to be nothing more than a messy cleanup of the sheriff’s screwup. Oh, joy.”
“You have a point.” Lance slid into the vehicle and rested his head on the back of the seat. He felt like he could sleep for a week.
Morgan sat up front with her sister. He heard them talking quietly. He was glad Morgan had stalled the sheriff on their questioning. He and Morgan needed to talk to Tina. There was something not adding up in Lance’s head.
“Where do you want to go?” Stella started the car.
“The ER,” Morgan said.
Lance stirred. “I don’t need—”
Morgan glanced over the seat. She was wearing her do not give me any trouble face.
Lance closed his eyes. All he really needed was a shower, a hot meal, and some sleep, but there were times in a relationship when arguing was not the best course of action. This was clearly one of those times.
Two hours later, he and Morgan found Tina in the surgical waiting room. An SFPD officer stood just outside the door. Stella had requested a guard for Tina, at least until Aaron’s body was recovered.
“Any word?” he asked.
Tina shook her head.
The hospital had let both Lance and Morgan shower, and they’d changed into fresh clothes Stella had brought them. Stella had supplied them a pizza as well, and they inhaled it while waiting for his discharge papers.
Lance’s multitude of small cuts and abrasions had been thoroughly disinfected and bandaged, as had Morgan’s hands. He hadn’t broken any bones, but from the feel of his body, he was going to be black and blue tomorrow.
A deputy had come and taken their statements. They kept their stories brief and basic. Morgan and Lance had fielded a shocking call from Sharp too. Since the call had ended, Lance’s brain had been sorting through the details Sharp had relayed about his meeting with Joe and Aaron’s comments on the observation deck. Sharp believed that Joe had nothing to do with Paul’s death. Aaron had acted alone, possibly in an attempt to stage a takeover of the organization he’d been running for twenty-five years. The missing money had been vital to his plan. But how had Brian gotten involved, and why had Aaron killed Paul? There were still too many missing pieces in the puzzle.
Did Tina have the answers? And even if she did, could Lance trust her answers?
Tina wore dry scrubs, likely provided by someone at the hospital. She looked frail and lost, sitting in the corner chair, her knees drawn up into a fetal position.
Morgan beelined for the coffee maker. Lance crossed the room and sat next to Tina. He didn’t say anything, just leaned his head back on the wall.
Morgan brought Tina a cup of tea. “Can I get you something to eat?”
Tina shook her head. Morgan produced a small package of shortbread cookies from the kangaroo pocket of her sweatshirt.
“Sharp called,” Lance began. “He’s on his way back to Scarlet Falls. It seems Aaron was in Albany earlier. He tried to have Sharp and a reporter killed.”
Tina wrapped her arms around her knees.
Lance continued. “Then Aaron headed up here. Sharp also learned something interesting. Right after Joe was convicted, two cops were murdered. It seems the cops were dirty, and Joe thought they stole a hundred grand from him. He had Aaron execute them.”
Tina rested her face on her knees.
“But the cops didn’t steal that money, did they?” Lance asked. Aaron had seemed certain it had been Tina.
Tina lifted her head and looked from Lance to Morgan. “Whatever I say to you is confidential. You can’t tell anyone.”
“That’s right.” Morgan opened the package of cookies.
“Joe had been bribing those cops forever,” Tina began. “When the money went missing, everyone assumed they took it.”
“But you stole the money?” Morgan asked.
“I don’t know anything about the money,” Tina lied. She didn’t show any of the classic body language of a liar, but Lance had come to recognize that her lack of expression was its own tell.
“Where is it?” Lance asked.
Tina met his gaze squarely, her eyes vacant of any emotion, her face deadpan. No doubt she had learned to lie smoothly as a survival tactic early in her life.
“You still don’t trust us.” Lance suspected Tina was too damaged to ever trust anyone. Except maybe her son.
“Once Evan is well, we won’t be able to stay here. Joe will come after us.” Tina had the money. Lance was certain of it, and she was determined to keep it.
“Sharp didn’t think it was Joe who ordered this. He thinks Aaron either wanted to oust Joe from the organization, or Aaron was going to fund his own retirement. Aaron thought you had the money and wanted to get it back from you. Sharp’s theory is that Aaron didn’t like handing the business back and taking orders from his father after he had been in charge for the last twenty-five years.”
“Aaron was always a greedy bastard, just like his father.” Tina lifted her chin. “But I will never feel safe as long as Joe is alive, and I still don’t understand why Aaron killed Paul.”
“To pressure you to give him the money?” Morgan suggested.
“That would only work if I knew that he wanted it.” Tina didn’t admit to having the cash. But she had it.
Lance could see it in her eyes. If he hadn’t been so tired, he would have realized it immediately. “It really is in the trunk of your car, isn’t it?” At the time, Lance had assumed she was just trying to keep Aaron from shooting anyone. The idea of her carrying a large sum of cash in her trunk had seemed absurd. But it all made sense.
Her surprised glance was all the answer he needed.
“You collected medical supplies, but you couldn’t have run without the money,” he continued.
The muscles of her jaw tightened. She would admit nothing, and he wouldn’t make her. There was no point. Lance didn’t care about Joe’s drug money, and having it was Tina’s safety net.
“We’ll be glad to help however we can,” Lance said.
He understood. Tina had been abused and betrayed from birth. The only person she’d ever been able to count on was herself. And who was to say she was wrong about Joe? She knew him best. Maybe he would come after her.
“There is something you can do.” Tina’s face creased. “I need to speak with Joe. I need to look him i
n the eye and ask him if he has any intention of coming after me or Evan. It’s the only way I’ll ever be able to sleep again. Can you arrange a meeting?”
“I can try.” Lance didn’t like the idea, but he understood. She needed to literally face her fear.
“Thank you,” Tina said.
“Let’s get through tonight.” Morgan stood. “I’m going to go find Rylee’s brother.”
Rylee’s surgery had been short and successful. When Lance and Morgan had checked an hour before, she’d been in recovery and doing well.
Morgan disappeared.
Thirty minutes later, a doctor in green scrubs came in.
Tina jerked straight.
“So far, so good,” the doctor said. “The wound didn’t look as bad as I expected. We’re keeping him in the ICU. We’ll see how his body reacts to the antibiotics. We should know more in the morning. But he’s a tough kid. I’m more hopeful now than I was before the surgery. I’ll send a nurse in when you can see him.”
The pressure in Lance’s chest eased. He was almost afraid to be relieved.
Tina nodded, close to tears.
The doctor left.
“Are you staying here tonight?” Lance asked.
“Yes,” Tina answered. “There’s a sleep chair in Evan’s room.”
“OK.” Lance stood. “I’ll be back to check on him tomorrow.”
Tina met his eyes. “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.” Lance left the room and went looking for Morgan. He found her in the hallway, headed back to see him.
He turned her around and relayed the update on Evan’s condition.
“Let’s go home and get some sleep,” Lance said.
Now that he’d had some good news about Evan, adrenaline seemed to be draining from Lance’s body. He slung an arm over Morgan’s shoulders and pretended he didn’t want to lean on her.
“What about Tina?” Morgan wrapped her arm around his waist, as if she knew he could use the support. But then, she always knew what he needed.
“As long as Evan is here, Tina isn’t going anywhere. And they should both be safe enough in the ICU with a cop outside the door.”
Morgan put her head on his shoulder.
Tonight, Lance needed to recharge his batteries with his own family.
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Morgan woke to the gray of predawn. She’d slept poorly. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Lance fighting Aaron, going under in the river, and being swept into boulders. She rolled over and watched him sleep for a few minutes. One arm was flung over his head. Gauze and tape covered a large abrasion on his forearm.
He was still sleeping off the sheer physical exertion of the previous night’s water rescue. She did not want him disturbed. His battered body needed rest.
There was no other man like him. How did she get so lucky?
Morgan slipped out of bed and into her favorite worn pair of jeans and a tank top. She stopped in the bathroom to brush her teeth and put her hair in a ponytail. Sliding her phone into her pocket, she tiptoed around the bed and turned off Lance’s ringer. A sound from the hallway caught her attention. She left the room, closing the door behind her.
Sophie stood in the hallway. Morgan greeted her with a kiss on the forehead, which was beautifully cool.
Sophie frowned at the closed door. “Is Wance still in bed?”
Nodding, Morgan pressed her finger to her lips. “He was up late. Let’s let him sleep a while longer, OK?”
Sophie considered the question for a second, then tilted her head. “Can I stay home from pweschool today?”
Was she trying to make a deal or was her question unrelated to allowing Lance to sleep? Considering how sick her youngest had been, Morgan had had no intention of sending her to school anyway. A preschool was basically a giant brick petri dish, and Sophie’s immune system would be weakened.
“Yes.” Morgan scooped her up, settled her on her hip, and carried her toward the dining room. They walked past the plastic sheeting that covered the opening to the gutted kitchen.
Sophie rested her head on Morgan’s shoulder. “I miss our kitchen.”
“Me too.” Morgan turned into the dining room.
“I like waffles.” Sophie sighed. “But I miss pancakes.”
Morgan noted Sophie’s correct pronunciation of the L in like. Was Sophie growing out of her lisp? That shouldn’t make Morgan sad, but there was a tiny part of her that didn’t want her children to grow up so quickly.
“Me too,” said Grandpa. Dressed in slacks and a blue polo shirt, he sat at the table, reading the news on his electronic tablet. He pointed toward the coffee maker. “The pot’s full.”
“Thank you.” Morgan set her daughter on the chair next to Grandpa and poured a cup of coffee. She lifted the mug awkwardly, the bandages on her hands getting in the way.
“How is Lance?” Grandpa asked.
“Exhausted. Sleeping.”
“It’s no wonder.” Grandpa pointed to his tablet. “There’s an article on the rescue. I don’t know how he did it.”
“Me either, and I watched.” She shuddered, another vision of Lance and Evan in the water flashing in her mind. Lance had succeeded with his intelligence, strength, willpower, and luck in equal measures.
“I’m sure you did more than watch.” Grandpa moved his tablet aside. He studied her for a few seconds. “Why haven’t you two set a date?”
“We’ve been busy.” Surprised by the change in topic, Morgan sipped her coffee.
Grandpa rolled his eyes. “Try feeding that lame excuse to someone who hasn’t interrogated a thousand suspects.”
“I’ve never been able to fool you.” Morgan stared into her cup, searching for the words to express an emotion she didn’t understand. “Every time I think about a church and a fancy dress, I think of John. It’s like wedding details and my memories of him are tied together.”
“That’s understandable. You two didn’t drift apart. He was taken from you.” Grandpa sighed. “Do you still want to get married?”
“I do,” Morgan answered, with no hesitation.
“Then make new and different memories with Lance. Who says you have to get married in a church? Fly to Vegas. Wear jeans. Rent a food truck. I can think of a hundred ways to get married that don’t involve a church or a fancy dress.”
“That’s all well and good for me, but Lance has never been married. He’s been talking about a big traditional wedding.”
“Have you asked him if that’s what he wants?”
“He says he doesn’t care, but I worry that he’s just saying that to make me happy.”
“What’s wrong with that?” Grandpa caught her eyes. “Lance is a straight shooter. I’m going to bet he doesn’t give two hoots about how you get married.”
Morgan smiled, warmth spreading through her. Was the answer that simple? Had she been overcomplicating everything? “Maybe you’re right.”
“Of course I’m right,” Grandpa huffed.
The rest of the family trickled into the room, and the morning shifted into gear. Morgan walked Ava and Mia to the bus stop, and Grandpa drove Gianna to dialysis. Grant arrived to take some measurements in the kitchen. The activity seemed too normal, and Morgan felt disoriented.
She took a fresh cup of coffee to the family room. In the middle of the floor, Sophie was hosting a tea party for Snoozer and Rocket. Both dogs sat companionably with the little girl, listening to her chatter and sniffing at the plastic teacups she set in front of them. Sophie rounded out the party with a few stuffed animals. She seemed content to entertain herself, so Morgan watched and enjoyed every moment.
The dogs lifted their heads and turned toward the front door in unison. Rocket shot across the carpet, upending a teddy bear and spilling imaginary tea. Morgan went to the door, grabbing the dog’s collar as she started barking.
“Shh,” she said. But Rocket was having none of it.
There was a man on the doorstep. Morgan looked out the wind
ow. Surprise drew her back.
Esposito?
The ADA was impeccably dressed in a dark-gray suit and white shirt. Morgan opened the door, using her foot to hold the dog back.
Esposito glanced at the dog and frowned. “I need to speak with you.”
“Please, come in.” Morgan stepped back.
Snoozer went back to the tea party. Rocket growled. Esposito crouched and held his hand out to the dog. She sniffed his fingers, wagged the stub of her docked tail, and let him scratch behind her ears.
“You like dogs?” Morgan closed the door.
“What’s not to like?” Esposito stood. He took in the house in one quick glance.
It was a mess, Morgan realized, without caring.
Sophie ran to Morgan, grabbed her hand, and tugged on it. Morgan leaned down. Sophie cupped her ear and said, in the loudest whisper ever, “Who is he?”
Morgan picked her up and straightened. “Sophie, this is Mr. Esposito.”
To her surprise, Esposito held out his hand. “It’s nice to meet you, Miss Sophie.”
Sophie shook his hand, then giggled and threw her body backward over Morgan’s arm. Grandpa came through the front door, and Morgan introduced him.
“Sophie and I are going to have a tea party.” Grandpa took her tiny hand. “Why don’t you take coffee out onto the deck?”
“Coffee?” she offered Esposito.
“Sure,” he answered.
She pointed to the glass doors. “I’ll bring it right out.”
When she brought out the two mugs, Esposito was standing at the railing. The deck overlooked the Scarlet River. The river was still high and the current choppy, but the sun shone on the water, and the air felt cooler than it had in weeks.
Below the deck, a fence surrounded the yard and kept the children away from the water.
“Pretty view.” Esposito took the coffee mug. “Your kid is cute.”
“Thank you.” Morgan leaned on the railing next to him. “I admit, your visit was not anticipated. I expected the sheriff to contact me this morning.”
Secrets Never Die Page 27