Everywhere She Turns
Page 25
“He won’t wait until morning.”
Fear trickled into her veins. “You think he’ll come after me tonight?”
Braddock nodded. “We were supposed to plan your meeting with him.”
She shrugged. “I found the video equipment and I got fired up. You weren’t here, so . . .”
“He could have forced you to tell him the truth right there in his house.” Braddock’s jaw started that flexing that meant he was pissed. “You went in his house and basically threatened him. You ordered my detective to stay in his car. If I hadn’t showed up—”
“I was already out the door when you showed up,” she argued. He wasn’t going to make her feel like a fool. She’d gotten a reaction out of the man. “It’s like you said, he’ll be on the move tonight. Attempting to find that tape. If he comes in here, that’s breaking and entering.”
Braddock shook his head. “It won’t be him. It’ll be some of his men. Like always.”
Had she done nothing right? “So what do I do? You’re the fucking detective.”
“You come home with me, where you’ll be safe.”
“Braddock, I can—”
“Don’t argue.” He exhaled a weary breath. Pain flashed across his face. “Celeste Martin’s body was found today.”
CJ’s heart sank into her stomach. “He killed her because of me.”
“No,” Braddock said firmly. “He killed her because he’s a low-life scumbag.”
She wrapped her arms around her middle. She’d known Celeste was probably dead, but hearing it . . . Dear God.
“Pack for an overnight stay,” he ordered. “I’m not letting you out of my sight.”
Wait. She pushed away the misery. His suggestion would ruin everything. “What if Nash sees me leave with you? I didn’t put on that performance for nothing.”
“You leave in your car. Then I’ll leave. We’ll rendezvous at the cabin. I’ll keep you in sight to make sure you don’t have a tail. I’ll give Jenkins the night off.”
She nodded. “I can be ready in five minutes.”
She turned her back on him and bounded up the stairs.
As she shoved her nightshirt and a change of clothes into a bag, she paused. What if this didn’t work? What if Tyrone didn’t show in the morning?
Would she ever know who killed her sister?
She stared up at the small hole in the ceiling over the bed. Why couldn’t there have been a tape in there?
Someone had to know what happened.
Who had taken the tape out of that VCR?
Had Shelley hidden it? Taken it with her to blackmail the person she’d left with that night?
How the hell was she ever going to find out?
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
6:40 PM
It was cooler on the mountain.
Once she and Braddock had rendezvoused at the cabin, he drove her to Hampton Cove to pick up dinner at Mikato’s. It wasn’t like there would be any delivery service deep in the woods of the state park.
And for the first time since she’d gotten Braddock’s phone call, she was hungry. Really hungry.
She’d eaten her fill of steamed vegetables and fried rice. Now she felt tired and satisfied to some degree. She had called Lusk about the key. She hadn’t answered so CJ had left a voicemail. One way or another she was getting in that clinic tomorrow.
There were many things about her sister’s life that she now understood. Like the deceit and the inability to depend upon those who were supposed to provide protection. Like law enforcement officers . . . and medical personnel.
Lusk and Cost had taken advantage of Shelley. Had used her like she was some disposable product manufactured for their entertainment.
The idea made CJ sick. They wouldn’t get away with this. That was one thing she could ensure.
And Celeste. Poor Celeste. Nash couldn’t keep getting away with what he was doing to those women.
Braddock joined her on the couch. “You okay?”
CJ closed her eyes, drew in a deep, deep breath. “The one thing I’m certain of right now is that I’m not okay.”
“What those two did is criminal.”
Over dinner she had filled Braddock in on the confrontation between Lusk and Cost.
“I suppose”—CJ opened her eyes—“Carter Cost was the secret man in Shelley’s life.” It killed CJ to think that Shelley had been so happy. She’d thought she finally had a good guy. A guy who was somebody. And he’d only been using her.
Braddock nodded. “You know that makes him a suspect.”
He was right. “Oh, my God.” The words he’d screamed at Lusk finally made sense. “He said something like, ‘You don’t know what you’ve done.’ ” Her gaze lifted to Braddock’s. “Do you think he could have killed her because he thought she was pregnant?”
“Before Banks was murdered, I would have said that was very possible. But the MO used to murder Shelley was the same one used on Banks. I can’t see any reason Cost would have killed Banks.”
“True.” CJ made a disparaging sound. “I can guarantee he isn’t man enough to get close to that dog, much less use it as a murder weapon.”
“Sounds like you and Cost have a history.”
“Believe it or not”—CJ hated how this was going to sound—“back in college, Cost dropped Lusk and went after me for a while. Trust me, his motives were only related to nailing a virgin. He dropped me soon after he had attained his goal. I guess Lusk still carries a grudge.” Poor Shelley. How was she ever supposed to have gotten her life back with odds like this?
But she had been doing exactly that. There was no way to know if her determination would have withstood the pain of learning Cost had used her, had she lived.
CJ dropped her head on the sofa back. How could so many people associated with the village be so crazy? Evil?
Maybe it wasn’t all of them, just the ones she knew.
What did that say about her?
That she’d grown up in a dysfunctional, drug-abusing household.
Sad.
“I’ll have Cooper haul Cost in tomorrow just to rattle his cage.” Braddock smiled. “When she gets through with him, he’ll be a far humbler man.”
CJ touched his arm. “Only if I can watch.”
Braddock looked down at her hand on his arm, then lifted his eyes back to hers. That desire was there again. She should have moved her hand. Shouldn’t have just sat there staring at him. But somehow she couldn’t. He felt warm and strong. And she needed to feel those two things right now.
He took her hand in his, gently explored it. “So, you made it to college still a virgin?”
The rush of sensations, the pad of his thumb caressing her palm, those long fingers cradling the back of her hand, made a coherent thought impossible. “It’s weird, I know.” Flashes of him caressing her in other places, his hands all over her body, kept rushing through her head.
His fingers stilled and his eyes met hers once more. “Not weird at all. You were trying to do better for yourself.”
“As you say, I did a bang-up job. Carter was a colossal mistake. But I learned my lesson, I never let it happen again.”
“Meaning?”
The way he was looking at her . . . like he already knew the answer but wanted to hear her say it. “There wasn’t anyone else until you.” Memories of the other night, of him filling her so completely, set every single nerve ending in her body ablaze.
He leaned toward her, brushed his lips across hers. She eased forward, met his kiss. He tasted like coffee and Braddock, strong and caring.
Banging on the door had CJ jumping back.
Another round of pounding echoed through the small cabin.
Braddock released her hand and went to the front window. He took a look, then opened the door.
Detective Cooper waltzed in, her arms loaded with bags. “I came bearing gifts.”
CJ felt her cheeks redden. Talk about bad timing. If Detective Cooper suspected anything was going on
between CJ and Braddock, that could make them both look bad.
Braddock took the Wal-Mart bags from his partner. “What’s that?” He nodded to the big Priority Mail envelope beneath her arm.
“Evidence.” She shot a look across the room at CJ. “I don’t know about you, but I could use some coffee.”
CJ ordered herself to relax. “Sounds good to me.” Even though they’d had coffee from the restaurant, she could use more.
“I know what that means.” Braddock set the bags aside and headed for the tiny kitchen.
CJ moved to the table and watched as Cooper opened the envelope and pulled out a manila file folder.
By the time Braddock returned with the coffeepot and three mugs hooked on his fingers, Cooper had a number of photos and reports spread across the table.
“Thanks, partner,” she said as he set the cups and the pot on the rustic table amid her display.
CJ leaned down, took a closer look. “Crime scene photos?”
“That’s right.” Cooper poured herself a cup of coffee. “All believed to be Nash’s work.”
CJ shuddered, drew back. She noticed that there wasn’t one of Shelley. She was glad.
“Did you drive through the village before coming here?” Braddock wanted to know.
“I did. Chief Spencer gave us the two cops you asked for. Metcalf is watching the alley behind the Patterson house and Wallace has the front.” She reached into her back pocket and pulled out a folded-up envelope. “By the way, Lusk stopped by and stuck this on your door.”
“Why are they watching the house?” CJ had just assumed that since she wasn’t there, the surveillance wouldn’t be necessary. She accepted the envelope and opened it. “The key to the clinic.” Good. Part of her was glad she hadn’t had to face Lusk to get it.
Braddock passed CJ a cup of coffee, then poured one for himself. “If Nash gets any ideas about checking out your story, he won’t have any luck getting into the house.”
“Good point.” CJ hadn’t thought of that. Good thing she wasn’t a cop. She placed the key on the table. Braddock picked it up and tucked it into his pocket. “That’s one obstacle out of the way.”
“Okay.” Cooper gestured to her display of photos and reports. “All of the murders, including Shelley’s and Banks’s, have similarities. The murderer took a souvenir of sorts. Tongue, ear, foot, hand, et cetera. With Kimberly’s murder, he did the same, but he also left a written message—like the E. Noon or No One messages that have been left this time.” Cooper shrugged. “Sort of, anyway.” She picked up the evidence photo of the note Braddock had gotten when his niece went missing and placed it atop the others. “The one thing that these two recent murders have in common that none of the others do is the staging. That’s the part that doesn’t add up to me.”
“Maybe he’s trying to be clever,” CJ suggested. “He gets off on making other people look stupid. Maybe he thinks this is like an in-your-face thing directed at Braddock and you.”
Cooper downed a slug of coffee. “That’s a definite possibility. He likes kicking us in the teeth. There is also the possibility that it isn’t Nash.”
“But when you consider the most recent victims,” Braddock offered, “the one thing all three have in common is Tyrone Nash.”
“And living in the village,” CJ added. “Each was involved in drugs and prostitution.” She steeled herself against the emotions that tried to pound her composure. “Shelley was turning her life around, but . . .” She licked her lips. “Those activities were still a part of her recent history.”
Braddock tapped one of the photos. “The other sticking point is there was no signature at the scene where Celeste’s body was discovered.”
“Tyrone definitely killed her,” CJ protested. “He as much as said he did when he threatened me. Carter Cost had a motive for wanting Shelley out of his way, but even if he had killed her, he’d had no reason to kill Ricky or Celeste.”
“Just because we haven’t found the signature yet doesn’t mean it isn’t there,” Cooper argued. “The ME may find something on or in the body that we missed.”
“True,” Braddock allowed. “What we need now is to make Tyrone believe that CJ has something real on him. Maybe get him in a negotiating posture.”
CJ was counting the hours until her meeting with Tyrone. She tried not to be nervous, but her efforts were failing miserably. “He’ll want at least a glimpse of the tape as proof.”
“Exactly.” Cooper walked over to the bags she’d brought with her. “On my way here I stopped at Wal-Mart.” She looked from CJ to Braddock. “We’re going to make some porn.”
“Okay.” Cooper sat back on the wood beam. “Hand the camera up to me.”
Braddock stood on the bed and extended the handheld video camera to his partner. “You need anything else up there?”
“That’ll do it.” Cooper flashed one of those cheeky grins of hers. “Everything else is up to you two.”
CJ felt her pulse skip. This had seemed like a really good idea when Cooper had come up with it. But now CJ wasn’t so sure.
“You’re still okay with this?”
CJ met the question in Braddock’s eyes. Why was she second-guessing herself? It was the right thing to do.
“I’m good. Let’s do it.”
“You’re going to have to look naked,” Cooper reminded from her position on the ceiling beam.
Yeah . . . that was the problem.
Just stop. Do it and stop thinking. CJ peeled off her tee. Thankfully her bra was a nude color. Once she was standing there with nothing but the bra and her jeans, she didn’t give herself time to think. She climbed beneath the quilt on the bed and pulled it up to her chin.
“You’ll need to keep your face over hers,” Cooper said to Braddock. “The hair color is the same, but we don’t want him to get a glimpse of the face.”
“Uh-huh.” Braddock started unbuttoning his shirt.
CJ stared at the ceiling, just past where Cooper sat on the beam. She could do this. They had kissed just a little while ago. Only a few days ago they’d had sex. It wasn’t a big deal. Cooper would be watching. The video camera would be rolling.
It wouldn’t be real.
Maybe that was the problem. Maybe she wanted it to be real.
The bed shifted. Her breath evacuated her lungs.
He slid beneath the quilt. His leg brushed against hers and heat shot through her veins.
She blinked. His trousers were still on. They weren’t naked. It wasn’t a big deal.
“Jesus, Braddock,” Cooper said, “you’re going to have to get on top of her so her face doesn’t show.”
His dark gaze collided with CJ’s. “Yeah, yeah. I got it.”
He sounded as nervous as she felt. This was ridiculous. They’d had sex, for Christ’s sake. They were adults.
CJ thrust her arms around his neck and, deciding there was no turning back now, pulled his face closer. “We have to make this look real,” she muttered.
“That would be nice,” Cooper shouted down.
CJ felt her face flush. She hadn’t meant her to hear the comment.
“Real,” Braddock echoed. “Yeah.”
He dipped his head, brushed his lips across hers. She didn’t mean to, but she made a little sound . . . just a soft sigh. And she shivered.
He drew back, stared down at her.
She blinked.
God, this was so awkward!
He stared at her mouth a moment, then dove back in with his.
The kiss went on and on. Deeper. Soft at first, then harder. CJ forgot about Cooper up on the ceiling beam. Her entire focus was on his mouth . . . the feel of his muscled body pressing into hers. Her fingers threaded into his hair. His chest flattened against her breasts. Her nipples tightened and tingled.
Her heart started to beat faster and faster. She didn’t want this amazing sensation to stop. The firm ridge pressing into her pelvis had her tilting that part of her body into his. Couldn’t help her
self. It was sheer instinct. And sheer pleasure.
“I’m sorry, guys,” Cooper announced.
CJ’s eyes flew open. Braddock’s lips drew away from hers.
He turned his head. “What?” The single word was rough, thick.
CJ wasn’t the only one feeling the tension.
“The kissing is great,” Cooper explained, “but you’re going to have to move around some if you expect this to look realistic.”
Braddock turned his face back to CJ’s. He stared a long moment. The desire in his eyes made her heart thump harder.
“Gotcha,” he mumbled.
And then his mouth came down on hers. His body started to move, mimicking that up-and-down, grinding motion of lovemaking.
CJ lost herself to the rising sensations. She didn’t even want to think how long she’d been without sex until a few days ago. His back . . . his torso . . . she loved to touch him. Perfectly sculpted muscles . . . so warm. So strong. She imagined having him inside her now. Hard and thick. As if he’d imagined the same, his tongue thrust inside her mouth. Her legs wrapped around his and she lifted to meet his movements.
Waves of pleasure washed over her, started her toward that plunge of release. She tried to hold it back . . .couldn’t. Braddock’s breathing was heavy between kisses. His body tense. His movements grew more frantic, harder. The urge to rip off her jeans and take him was overwhelming.
“That should do it.”
Braddock froze.
CJ bit her lip to hold back a whimper. She blinked. Tried to catch her breath. Her entire body pulsed.
“Help me out here,” Cooper called down to Braddock.
He scrambled from under the quilt, climbed up to take the camera.
CJ scooted off the mattress. Grabbed her blouse and pulled it back on. Her body was still strumming with pleasure. She was so close to . . .
“I need some air.” Braddock stormed out of the cabin.
Cooper dropped down onto the bed. She shook her head. “Men. They just can’t take the heat.”
CJ managed a shaky smile. At the moment, she wasn’t exactly taking it too well either.
She rammed her fingers through her hair. Straightened her clothes.