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Thicker Than Water

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by Brigid Kemmerer




  “It’s fine, Danny—he didn’t touch me.”

  “I saw him shove you.” His grip tightens. “You’d better watch yourself.”

  His tone grates against my nerves and reminds me why I don’t like cops.

  “He didn’t shove me,” Charlotte says.

  “Watch myself?” I say to him. “It’s my mother’s funeral.”

  He gives a little laugh, and he lets go of my hand, somehow making it feel like a shove. “Yeah, you look really broken up about it, taking the time to rough up a girl.”

  My hands are in fists again, anger weaving its way through the less aggressive emotions. This narrow stretch of shade has turned too hot, almost stifling. I can smell my own sweat.

  I hate this suit.

  Danny’s watching me, his eyes almost predatory. I’ve gotten in my share of scrapes, and I can read the signs. Dangerous potential rides the air. He wants to hit me.

  My mother’s voice is like a whisper in my head. Behave yourself, Tommy.

  I force my hands to loosen. Danny’s right, in a way. I did shove her. I shouldn’t have put my hands on her. Someone spends five minutes being kind, and I act like a caged animal.

  It takes a lot of effort to back down. “Sorry,” I say, turning away from them. “I didn’t mean to cause a problem.”

  “Yeah, well, I don’t want to find my sister dead in her bed. Get me?”

  Something snaps inside of me. Anger splits into fury. My fist swings.

  Have you read all the Elemental books

  by BRIGID KEMMERER?

  Elemental (novella)

  Storm

  Fearless (novella)

  Spark

  Breathless (novella)

  Spirit

  Secret

  Sacrifice

  THICKER THAN WATER

  BRIGID KEMMERER

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  “It’s fine, Danny—he didn’t touch me.”

  Have you read all the Elemental books

  Title Page

  Dedication

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  CHAPTER ONE - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWO - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER THREE - THOMAS

  CHAPTER FOUR - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER FIVE - THOMAS

  CHAPTER SIX - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER SEVEN - THOMAS

  CHAPTER EIGHT - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER NINE - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TEN - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER ELEVEN - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWELVE - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN - THOMAS

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN - THOMAS

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN - THOMAS

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER NINETEEN - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER TWENTY - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT - THOMAS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER THIRTY - THOMAS

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE - CHARLOTTE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO - THOMAS

  CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE - CHARLOTTE

  Copyright Page

  For Sarah Fine, the bravest woman I know.

  I’m so glad I forced you to be my friend.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  These are going to be rambling acknowledgments, but I’m better at telling stories than making lists, so here goes.

  I started this book while lying in bed. Thomas leapt into my head, fully formed, and I had to start his story immediately. I didn’t even waste time grabbing my laptop—I just started writing his book on my e-reader. On a touch-screen keyboard, people. I still remember my husband rolling over and saying, “Who are you writing an email to, this late at night?”

  I said, “I’m not writing an email. I’m starting a new book.”

  And in his usual way, he laughed a little, rolled over, and said, “Okay, honey. I’m going to sleep.”

  So in my usual way, I’m going to say thank you to my amazing husband, Michael Kemmerer, for being my best friend and the man I’m lucky enough to spend my life with. I couldn’t do this without him.

  As always, love and gratitude to my mother, who is an inspiration to me, and could not be more supportive. As a registered nurse, she’s also my quick go-to for medical questions. I just have to be careful to let her know it’s for book research. I still remember the night I texted her to ask what would happen when someone got to the ER with a bullet wound. Her response? “WHO GOT SHOT?”

  I’m lucky enough to have critique partners who are also my closest friends. Bobbie Goettler, Sarah Fine, and Alison Kemper, you help me more than you’ll ever know, and you inspire me as women, mothers, and writers. I couldn’t do this without you guys.

  My agent, Mandy Hubbard, is beyond compare. I once wrote an email to Mandy while sobbing so hard I could barely see the screen, and her uplifting response is still one I trot out when I tell aspiring authors, “This. This is what you want your agent to do for you.”

  Alicia Condon and the entire team at Kensington, especially Alex Nicolajsen and Michelle Forde, have been in my corner since day one, and I’m so glad to be working with you all. Thank you so much for allowing me to bring new characters to my readers. I’m so glad you loved Thomas and Charlotte as much as I did.

  Jodie Webster and Eva Mills and everyone at Allen & Unwin are delightful people, and I’m so lucky to have gotten the chance to work with you all. Thank you so much for all you’ve done for the Merrick brothers, and now for Thomas and Charlotte.

  Huge, huge, HUGE thanks to Officer James Kalinosky of the Baltimore County Police Department, along with his wife Nicole Kalinosky, for all the advice, insight, and anecdotes about the world of police work and the impact it can have on a family.

  Much gratitude to the friends who read some (or all) of my early drafts and offered words of advice to help make the story better: Nicole Mooney, Nicole Choiniere-Kroeker, Tracy Houghton, Brenda Freeman, and Amy Laura Jackson.

  (Looks like I can make a list after all.)

  Huge thanks to Dr. Darin Kennedy for providing medical knowledge when my mom wasn’t around, especially for helping me with some tricky situations. Any errors are mine.

  I owe a great deal of thanks to the Kemmerer boys, Jonathan, Nick, Sam, and Baby Zach, for allowing me time to follow my dreams.

  Finally, extra special thanks to Jim Hilderbrandt for reading an early draft and telling me where I was going wrong. You saved this book, friend. Your day is coming soon.

  CHAPTER ONE

  THOMAS

  I hate this suit.

  Mom bought it two weeks ago, and I hated it then. But she started with the whole please and for me and just this once and I gave in. Because she knows my buttons.

  Knew. She knew my buttons.

  I hate the past tense.

  I’m definitely not a suit guy. She knows that.

  Damn it.

  She knew that, like she knew how I liked my oatmeal and the reason my hair got too long and how I still don’t like to sleep with my door closed even though eighteen is way too old to be afraid of the dark. If she’d walked into a store to buy me clothes on a random day, she’d walk out with the right things: T-shirts and hoodies and jeans and dark socks. She knew the right kind of charcoal penc
ils and the right brand of sketchpad and the right time to leave me alone.

  The last time she bought me a suit was for Homecoming sophomore year. I wasn’t a suit guy then either, but I’d worked up the nerve to ask Anne Marie Lassiter and she’d said yes, so a suit it was.

  I outgrew the girl before I outgrew the suit.

  Just this once.

  Of all the things Mom said to me, that’s the one that keeps echoing. Because it wasn’t once.

  I’m on my third try with this stupid tie, and I’m getting to the point where I just want to hang myself with it. It’s yellow and navy, the colors of the ribbons on her wedding bouquet.

  The colors of the bars on Stan’s police uniform.

  Ironically, they’re the colors of the bruises on your neck when you die of strangulation.

  Trust me. I got a firsthand view.

  Just this once.

  My hands are shaking now, and I yank the tie free and fling it on my dresser.

  Stan knocks on the door and sticks his head in without waiting.

  He does that. I hate that.

  I don’t hate him, though. Not yet, anyway. I barely know the guy.

  Stan probably figured he was hitting the jackpot, marrying a single mom with an eighteen-year-old kid. Get the stepdad brownie points without the work. At first I was worried that he’d be a pain in the ass, being a cop and all. That whole gotta-be-the-bigger-man crap. But I stayed out of his way, he stayed out of mine. He treated her well and made her happy. Good enough for me.

  He’s still standing there, looking at me in the mirror.

  “What?” I say.

  “You about ready?”

  I think about telling him I can’t get the tie knotted, but then he’d offer to help me and this would be all kinds of awkward.

  This is already all kinds of awkward.

  “Yeah,” I say.

  He disappears from the doorway.

  I ball up the tie and put it in my pocket.

  Stan doesn’t say anything during the drive to the church. I don’t either. When he makes a turn, the click of the signal makes my head pound.

  It’s weird sitting in the front seat with him. I should be in the back. Mom should be up front, providing a buffer of conversation, asking me about school and graduation while simultaneously asking Stan about cases he’s working on.

  Stan is a detective.

  I wonder if it’s a blow to his ego, a cop’s wife murdered in his own bed ten days after their wedding. Poor ol’ Stan, the subject of police gossip.

  God, I’m such a dick sometimes. Maybe I do hate him. Words are trapped in my mouth, and I’m afraid to say any of them, because they’ll explode out of me with enough force to wreck the car.

  Why haven’t you done something?

  Why couldn’t you protect her?

  HOW COULD YOU LET THIS HAPPEN?!

  Stan was at work when she died. I was in my own bed.

  I don’t know which is worse.

  I didn’t hear anything. I found her when I woke to use the bathroom.

  Maybe I hate myself. Maybe I hate everyone.

  “You all right?”

  I glance at Stan. His eyes are on the road ahead, and his voice is quiet. I don’t know why he’s even asking. Of course I’m not all right. “Fine,” I say.

  He doesn’t ask anything else.

  Mom would pry. She’d dig the secrets out of me with the dexterity of an archaeologist, leaving my feelings intact while letting the truth rise to the surface. Like I said, she knew my buttons.

  Then again, Stan is a detective, so he can probably do the same thing. Maybe he doesn’t want to pry.

  The dead heat of summer gives me a big wet kiss when I climb out of the car, reminding me why I don’t wear suits. Reminding me that I probably should have gotten a haircut when she asked me. My neck already feels damp, and I’m glad I didn’t mess with the tie.

  I’ve never been to this church, a long, squat brick building with a steeple at one end and an aluminum roof. Stained glass windows glitter with the Stations of the Cross. Nice. Colorful depictions of suffering and torture. Great place.

  I don’t know why we’re having the funeral in a church anyway. Mom dragged me to church all the time when I was a kid, but we haven’t gone in years. Maybe she and Stan went. I don’t know.

  Cops are everywhere. Clustered in groups clinging to the shade along the side of the building, off by the parking lot grabbing a quick smoke, slapping Stan on the shoulder.

  They ignore me. Good. Sort of.

  The atmosphere is wrong here. There’s no sense of loss, no anguish and grief. I feel like I’m trapped in a glass box with my own twisting emotions, watching everyone else at a social event.

  It’s infuriating.

  I don’t know anyone except Stan. I’m sure I met a few of these people at the wedding, but it was a small ceremony at the courthouse, and no one stands out. Mom’s two friends from back home called to tell me they couldn’t get time off again, couldn’t make the drive out for the second time in two weeks. I said fine, whatever. The only thing worse than being here alone would be mom’s friends treating me like a six-year-old who can’t get a straw into a juice box.

  Everyone is standing in groups. Only one other guy is across the parking lot, standing under a tree. He’s not in uniform, but that doesn’t mean he’s not a cop. He’s built like one. He looks like he’s texting. Must really be feeling the loss.

  He feels me watching him, because his eyes lift from his phone.

  I look away before he can catch my gaze, then pull into the shade myself. It doesn’t help. Part of me wants to put a fist through this brick wall. Another part wants to run from here, to pretend none of this is happening.

  Suspicious glances keep flicking my way, as if I’m the oddball here, instead of all the people who don’t even know the woman they’re supposed to be mourning.

  Maybe it’s just me. Cops make me nervous. Always have. Maybe it’s a teenager thing, the way they always look at you like you’re on the cusp of doing something wrong. Maybe it’s the year Mom and I spent avoiding the law because Daddy was a very bad man, and we couldn’t risk any kind of trouble.

  Maybe it’s the interrogation I had to sit through after finding Mom’s body.

  I don’t know what I’m doing here. When we moved in with Stan, I left my friends three hours away. Now we’re way on the south side of Salisbury, in the middle of nowhere, at this frigging church with death scenes embedded in the walls and a bazillion cops who are all here for him, not her.

  I yank at the collar of my shirt and feel someone watching me.

  At first I think of the guy with the cell phone, but when I glance across the parking lot, he’s gone. It’s a girl in a purple dress. She stands with an older woman, and by older I mean that there’s a chance her wrinkled skin might give up the fight and slide the rest of the way down her body. Ol’ Wrinkly is wearing an honest-to-god navy blue hat with a veil. She looks emotional while she talks to Stan, dabbing at her eyes with a tissue.

  What a joke. If she knew my mother, she didn’t know her well. I’ve never seen her before.

  I’ve never seen the girl before either, but since she’s looking at me, I look back at her. She’s got to be about my age. Thick, curly caramel hair, skin too pale for summertime, dark framed glasses, curves in all the right places. She’d be a challenge to sketch, because the tiny waist and the curves would make her look like a superhero comic, especially with that rack.

  I jerk my eyes away. I shouldn’t be checking out a girl at my mother’s funeral. Mom would cuff me on the neck and tell me to behave myself.

  But the girl peels away from the overwrought woman and heads my way. She’s wearing high-heeled sandals, and she stumbles a bit on the crooked pavement. The movement makes her hair sway, and she brushes it out of her eyes.

  I’m staring.

  Then she’s in front of me, holding out a hand. “I don’t think we’ve met.”

  I shak
e her hand, and it feels too formal, like I’m meeting a college recruiter. But I can play this game because it’s better than thinking about my mother rotting inside a wooden box. “We haven’t.”

  “I’m Charlotte.”

  “I’m Thomas.”

  She doesn’t let go of my hand. “Tom?”

  She could call me Princess Sparklepants if she wants. I couldn’t care less about my name at this point. “Whatever.”

  She finally releases my hand. Her expression says she’s picked up on some of my tension. “Thomas, then. How do you know Stan? Is one of your parents on the force?”

  Of course she thinks I’m here for him. No one in this place knows Mom.

  I have to clear my throat, because my answer will embarrass this girl, but it’s not like I can lie about it. “He married my mother.”

  Her face goes more pale, if that’s possible. I don’t like that. It reminds me of another pale face, which makes me start thinking about bruised necks again.

  “It’s fine,” I say, even though it’s not. I try to keep the anger out of my voice, because she doesn’t deserve it. I don’t even know what good it’s doing me. My voice comes out all gravelly. “I’ve only lived here a few weeks. I don’t know anyone.”

  “I’m so sorry,” she says softly.

  What am I supposed to say to that? I don’t even know this girl.

  I find myself shrugging before realizing that makes me look indifferent. People are watching me again. The attention weighs on my shoulders. Do they know who I am, or are they wondering like Charlotte? Which would be better?

  I’ve been quiet too long. My jaw feels tight. She reaches for my hand again. Her fingers are small and gentle and soft against my palm, such a contrast to the businesslike formality of her handshake. “You don’t need to stand here by yourself. Come meet my family—”

  “I’m fine.” I hold fast, jerking my hand away from her. I can keep it together here, alone, by the wall, but I can’t take a dozen strangers talking at me.

 

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