ROCKY MOUNTAIN RESCUE

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ROCKY MOUNTAIN RESCUE Page 18

by Cindi Myers


  She shook her head. “I believe his story about being caught up in Nordley’s schemes. I meant, what will happen to me? Do I have to remain in custody?”

  “No. But I’ll help you get settled.”

  “I still don’t want to be in WITSEC. There’s no reason for that now.”

  “I wasn’t talking about WITSEC.”

  “You mean I’m on my own?”

  “Only if you want to be.”

  The warmth was gone from his voice, replaced by an anxious tone. He shifted nervously and studied her face, as if trying to decipher her thoughts. The man who was always so confident and sure of himself looked lost. “What’s wrong?” she asked. “Why are you acting so weird?”

  “Because I don’t know how else to act.” He touched her shoulder, a tentative brush of two fingers against her collarbone. “Would you think I was crazy if I told you I loved you?”

  “That is crazy talk,” she said, even as her heart raced.

  He ran a hand through his hair so that the blond strands stood on end. “I know we’ve only known each other a few days. But in that time I feel I’ve gotten to know you and...I’ve never felt about anyone the way I feel about you. I think you’re amazing—smart and brave and strong, and a great mother, a beautiful, sexy lover.... I just... I can’t deal with the idea of losing you.”

  “You don’t have to lose me.”

  His eyes searched hers again. “What are you saying?”

  She shifted Carlo, who had fallen asleep, to her other side. “You live in Denver, right?”

  He nodded.

  “I could move to Denver,” she said. “I can find a job, maybe even go back to school. We could see each other—see how we do together in the real world.”

  “I’d like that.”

  She almost laughed. “That’s all you can say?”

  In answer, he pulled her close and kissed her. Lips locked to hers, he lifted both her and Carlo off the ground. When their lips parted, they were both breathless. “I’d love that, Stacy Giardino,” he said. “I love you.”

  “I love you, too, Patrick Thompson. As crazy as we both are—I love you.”

  Epilogue

  One year later

  Stacy looked out the window of the courthouse at the crowd of reporters waiting at the bottom of the steps. News vans lined the street and the microphones and cameras were three deep. “I can’t believe they all want to talk to me,” she said.

  Patrick, looking more handsome than ever in a suit and tie, put a reassuring hand to her back. “Your testimony was crucial in convicting Senator Nordley, not to mention the human-interest angle of an ordinary woman being caught up in a mob family, then having to fight to save her child—the public loves you.”

  “I’ll be happy when things settle down and I’m no longer in the spotlight.” She straightened the jacket of her chic suit. The bold purple-and-black colors made her stand out in the sea of lawyerly gray. “Guess we’d better get this over with.”

  The door to the anteroom where she and Patrick had retreated opened and Carlo raced in. “Mama, we’re going to be on TV!” he said.

  “Looks like it.” She knelt to smooth his tie. “You remember what I told you? Mind your manners and don’t speak unless someone asks you a question.”

  He nodded. “Aunt Deborah already told me all that.”

  Stacy looked up at the woman who had followed Carlo into the room. Deborah Thompson had the same blond hair and blue eyes as her brother, but she was petite and delicate. She smiled at Stacy. “Are you ready?”

  Stacy stood and took a deep breath. “I think so.”

  Deborah came and slipped her arm around Stacy’s shoulder. “You’re going to do great. Just remember all we talked about.”

  Stacy nodded. For almost a year now she’d been seeing Deborah once a week for counseling sessions. It turned out Patrick’s sister was a psychologist. A former battered wife herself, she specialized in helping other women who’d been in abusive situations.

  With brother and sister on either side of her and Carlo running ahead, Stacy made her way out to the reporters. Camera flashes flared and voices shouted questions. She read the statement she’d prepared, thanking federal agents and prosecutors for bringing a serious predator and criminal to justice.

  “What are your plans now that the trial is over?” a reporter asked.

  “I’ve been accepted into University of Denver law school,” she said. “I’ll start classes there in a few weeks.”

  “Are the rumors about you and Marshal Thompson true?” another voice shouted.

  “Is that an engagement ring you’re wearing?” asked someone else.

  Stacy smiled down at the diamond solitaire on the third finger of her left hand. Patrick had given it to her at dinner last night, when they’d known for sure the trial would end today. His proposal hadn’t been a surprise; they’d been inseparable for the past year. So her answer hadn’t been unexpected, either.

  “Stacy has done me the honor of agreeing to be my wife.” Patrick had stepped up to the mic beside her.

  “What do you think of that, Carlo?” someone asked.

  Patrick lifted the little boy to the microphone so he could answer. “I think he’ll be a good dad,” Carlo said. When some in the crowd laughed, he buried his face in Patrick’s shoulder, suddenly shy.

  “That’s all the time we have for questions.” The chief prosecutor stepped in to guide them away from the microphones. They retreated back into the courthouse. Patrick’s car was parked in the underground garage, making a discreet getaway easier.

  “You did great.” Deborah patted her shoulder. “I’ll see you two later.” She kissed Stacy’s cheek, then repeated the gesture with Patrick and Carlo.

  “How do you feel?” Patrick asked Stacy, after he’d set Carlo down. The little boy ran ahead to the elevator. “Are you relieved it’s all over?”

  “I’m relieved the trial is behind us. As for the rest...” She smiled and took his arm. “I feel like my life is finally beginning. I have school to look forward to, and the wedding, and us being together as a family. A real family, full of love and support. That’s a first for me.”

  “Me, too.” He stopped walking and turned toward her. “Have I told you lately how much I love you?”

  “Not in the past half hour.”

  He kissed her lightly. “It’s true.” Then he deepened the kiss, pulling her close.

  “You’re embarrassing me!” Carlo’s voice rang through the lobby.

  “Better get used to it,” Patrick called. “Your mother and I plan to spend the rest of our lives embarrassing you.”

  Stacy rested her forehead against Patrick’s shoulder, laughing. A year ago, she wouldn’t have believed she could be so happy. One man—and love—had made all the difference.

  * * * * *

  Keep reading for an excerpt from THE PROSECUTOR by Adrienne Giordano.

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  Chapter One

  Assistant State’s Attorney Zac Hennings leaned back in his chair the second before a newspaper smacked against his desk.

  “If there’s any blowback on this,” R
ay Gardner said, “it’s yours.”

  Zac glanced at the newspaper. On page one, below the fold, was a photo of a young woman—brunette—gazing out a window framed by a set of gold drapes. Someone’s living room. The headline read Fighting for Justice. He skimmed the first few paragraphs. The Chelsea Moore murder.

  A burst of adrenaline exploded in Zac’s brain. Big case.

  Turning from the newspaper, he looked back to his boss. Ray’s generic gray suit fit better than most he wore but still hung loose on his lean frame. Once in a while, to keep his staff sharp, Ray would show up in a blue or black suit. Regardless, the guy needed a good tailor, but Zac wasn’t going to be the one to suggest it. Not when Ray led the Criminal Prosecutions Bureau, the largest of the six divisions of the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office.

  Ray gestured to the newspaper. “The Sinclairs got traction with this. Steve Bennett—”

  “The detective? The one who died last week?”

  “That’s him. Brain cancer. He apparently refused to face his maker without clearing his conscience. He sent Emma Sinclair a video—starring himself— telling her the witness who ID’ed her brother wasn’t sure he got the right guy. According to Steve, detectives pressured the witness into saying he was positive.”

  Zac took his time with that one, let it sink in. “We locked up Brian Sinclair for murder and now we’ve got deathbed revelations?”

  “Something like that. The State’s Attorney called me at six this morning after seeing her newspaper. She wants the office bulldog on this. That’s you, by the way. You’ll have all the case files this afternoon.”

  More files. Every open space in Zac’s office had been jammed with stacks of folders containing all the lurid details of crimes ranging from robberies to murders. Where he’d put more files he had no idea, but as one of nine hundred assistant prosecutors in Chicago, a city plagued with over five hundred murders last year, he had bigger problems than storage space.

  Not for the first time, his responsibilities settled at the base of his neck. He breathed in, gave that bit of tension its due diligence and put it out of his mind. Unlike some of the attorneys around him, he lived for moments like this. Moments when that hot rush of scoring an important case made him “the man,” marching into court, going to battle and kicking some tail.

  The cases were often brutal, not to mention emotionally paralyzing, but his goal would always be telling the victim’s loved ones they got a guilty verdict. No exceptions. In this case, they’d already convicted someone. Zac had to make it stick.

  Adding to the drama was Chelsea’s father, Dave, who was a veteran Chicago homicide detective. A good, honest cop who’d lost his child to a senseless act of violence.

  In short, Zac wanted to win.

  Every time.

  “We’re already behind the curve with this article,” Ray said.

  “I’ll get us caught up.”

  When Chelsea Moore’s murder occurred, Zac had been grinding his way through misdemeanors. After getting promoted to felonies, he’d worked like a dog to win his cases and it paid off. Big-time. Ray had just assigned him a politically and emotionally volatile case that he’d bleed for in order to keep Chelsea’s killer behind bars.

  No matter how hard Emma Sinclair came at them, Dave’s daughter deserved justice. And Zac would see that she got it. He’d study the trial transcripts and learn the facts of the case.

  “The P.D. will go to the wall for Dave Moore,” Ray said.

  “Yep. The guy breaks cases no one else can. He won’t tolerate his daughter’s murderer going free. His buddies won’t, either.”

  Ray pointed. “Bingo.”

  If Emma Sinclair managed to get her brother’s conviction overturned, the Chicago P.D. would not only be angry, they’d also make sure Helen Jergins, the new State’s Attorney who’d promoted Zac, got run out of town. Hard.

  Ray shifted toward the door then turned back. “Whatever you need, you let me know. We have to win this one.”

  “I got this,” Zac said. “Count on it.”

  * * *

  EMMA STOOD IN FRONT of the huge whiteboard she’d rolled to her mother’s basement wall and contemplated her revised list of target defense attorneys. Given the newspaper article, today would be the day to once again get cracking on Project Sinclair.

  Eighteen months ago her twenty-two-year-old brother, a guy who had nothing but love for those around him, had been convicted of strangling a young woman outside a nightclub. Unable to withstand the injustice of the circumstantial case—no fingerprints or DNA—Emma started banging on the doors of defense attorneys all over the city, trying to win a reversal. No matter how many times she was told no, she would not be silenced. Not when her innocent brother was rotting in prison.

  She flicked her finger against the whiteboard. The new video evidence would lure one of these lawyers in. It had to. The case suddenly had all the political melodrama—corruption, false witness testimony, withholding information—defense attorneys thrived on.

  She spun back to the oblong folding table, shoved aside an open banker’s box, grabbed the binder with her latest set of research and made a note to study up on Brady and Giglio material. Being a first-year law student, a field she’d never imagined for herself, she hadn’t yet mastered the concepts, but they involved impeaching a witness and items prosecutors were required to share with the defense. Maybe in the next few days she’d have a defense attorney—preferably pro bono, considering that she was broke—to help her slice through the technical aspects of the case.

  Above her head, the exposed water pipe clunked. Her mother flushing the toilet. Emma sighed. She should move all this stuff upstairs to Brian’s old room, but her mother didn’t need to see a daily reminder that her son was a convicted murderer. Bad enough the poor woman had to think about it, never mind see it every time she walked upstairs.

  So Emma and her effort to free her brother would stay in the cold, dreary basement, surrounded by cobwebs that, no matter how many times she brushed them away, kept returning. When the time came for her to move out on her own again, she’d have a finished basement. No doubt about it. For now, she’d left her cute little apartment in Wrigleyville so her widowed mother wouldn’t have to face her demons alone.

  A rapid click-click-click of heels hitting the battered hardwood came from the first floor. Emma had spent countless hours listening to her mother’s footsteps above. Whether early morning or the darkness of night when sleep eluded them, Emma recognized the sound of her mother’s shoes. The ones she’d just heard didn’t belong to her mom. Someone’s here.

  “Emma?” her mother called from the doorway.

  “Yes?”

  “There’s a Penny Hennings here to see you.”

  Emma froze. Penny Hennings. She perused her whiteboard, where she’d alphabetized the lawyers’ names. Hennings. There it was. Not Penny, though. Gerald, from Hennings and Solomon.

  Maybe Penny was a relative sent to check her out for Gerald Hennings, who might want to take the case. And if said relation fought downtown traffic on a weekday morning and hauled herself to the North Side, to Parkland, it had to be serious. Emma linked her fingers together and squeezed. Please, let it be.

  “Be right up, Mom.”

  She glanced down at her sweats, torn T-shirt and pink fuzzy slippers. Great. She’d have to face some snazzy lady from a big-time law firm in this getup. She plucked a rubber band from the little bowl with the paper clips. Least she could do was tie back her tangled hair.

  Rotten luck.

  Forget it. She had to put her appearance out of her mind. For all she knew, Penny Hennings could be a cosmetics saleswoman.

  But what were the chances of that? Particularly at 9:00 a.m. on the morning an article about Brian ran?

  “Emma?” her mother called.

 
“Coming.”

  She straightened. If Penny Hennings was from Hennings and Solomon, Emma had to go into full sales mode and convince this woman that her firm should take Brian’s case. After eighteen months of studying overturned convictions and hounding lawyers, it was time for their odds to change. And Hennings and Solomon could make that happen.

  Emma ditched her slippers at the base of the stairs and marched up. She looked like hell, but she’d dazzle this would-be-lawyer-slash-cosmetics-saleswoman with her powers of persuasion.

  The basement door stood open and Mom’s voice carried from the living room. Emma closed her eyes. This could be it. After a long, streaming breath, she stepped out of the short hallway.

  A minuscule woman—maybe late twenties—with shoulder-length blond hair sat on the sofa. The plaid, overstuffed chair tried to swallow her, but her red power suit refused to be smothered. No, that puppy screamed strength and defiance and promise. Could be a good sign.

  Plus, to the woman’s credit, she kept her gaze on Emma’s face and not her attire. One cool cookie, this blonde.

  Emma extended her hand to the now standing woman. “Hello. I’m Emma Sinclair.”

  “Good morning. I’m Penny Hennings. I’m an attorney from Hennings and Solomon. I’m sorry to barge in, but I saw the story on your brother this morning.”

  Emma glanced at her mother, took in her cloudy, drooping brown eyes and flat mouth. A heavy heart had stolen her mother’s joy. Ten years ago, at the age of forty, the woman had been widowed and learned that hope could be a fickle thing. Emma, though, couldn’t give in to that defeatist thinking. There was a reason she’d been left fatherless at sixteen and now, with her brother in prison, had assumed the role her father would want her to take. To watch over Mom and free Brian.

  Some would say she didn’t deserve all this loss. Why not? It turned out their family had crummy luck. Her father’s sudden death from a brain aneurysm had left a void so deep she’d never really acknowledged it for fear that she’d be consumed by it and would cease experiencing the joy the world offered. Ignoring that vast hole inside her seemed easier.

 

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