Remember the police procedural I mentioned on Sunday? The one I said I might post part of here just to throw it out into the universe? Well, consider this the wind up, and the pitch.
Don't Let Go is currently sitting at 61,500 words, and despite lots of waffling, it seems like it would be a shame to abandon it with so much already written. Plus, I've grown attached to the characters, and already have a sequel planned. *ducks tomatoes*
This is a contemporary novel set in Nashville, TN, that's half M/F romantic suspense, and half police procedural about a group of detectives struggling with personal problems against the backdrop of an assault against a celebrity author. After writing College Town, in which Lawson wants to be and is struggling to become an author, I decided to flip the script: this novel's central protagonist is an author who's hit it big, and has garnered a lot of ugly, unwanted attention in the process. She's attacked after a book signing in Nashville, and the local detectives set about solving the case while the media has a field day. Stuck in Nashville during the investigation, our author, Avery, becomes romantically entangled with the sexy district attorney in charge of taking her attackers to trial. Conflict of interest much?
It's a whodunnit meets character-driven real-life drama, and I'm dropping the first five chapters here. Have a gander, see if you're interested, and leave me a comment. 😊
*Fair warning, this hasn't been edited or proofed AT ALL, so here there be typos.
1
An employee
in a pin-bedecked ID lanyard claps her hands and then cups them around her
mouth to yell, “Attention, shoppers! TBR is now closed! Please collect your
final purchases and make your way to the register!”
Avery glances
up from the page she’s signing with a start. “It’s ten already?”
“Yes,” her
publicist, Trish, says with a gusty sigh and a fast check of her Apple watch.
“Thank God.” She then turns a severe smile on the last fan in line that leaves
the woman blinking and stepping back. That’s Trish: punctual, organized to a
fault, a hell of a hard worker…terrible with people. “No offense, ma’am. We
hope you enjoyed the signing.” She gives a little shoo motion with the flats of
her hands.
The woman,
mid-fifties, plump and sweet-faced in a way that reminds Avery of her late
grandmother, clutches at her purse and swaps a bewildered look between Trish
and Avery. “Oh, um, well, yes,” she stammers. To Avery: “The reading was really
wonderful. I loved the new chapters—”
“Super,”
Trish says, and bends over the signing table to start stacking up spare
bookmarks and post cards. Without looking at the woman, she adds, “Be sure to
mark your calendar for the next release: March fifth. Thanks so much for
coming.”
Avery frowns,
not that Trish sees it, too busy boxing swag.
Avery smiles
up at the fan and says, “We’re not in a hurry. Would you like a photo?”
The woman’s
face lights up.
Trish sighs
again, long-suffering.
Avery ignores
her. “And who should I make the book out to?”
“My daughter,
Mia. She’s gonna be so thrilled! It’s a birthday surprise. I wish she could
have been here, but she has finals coming up and couldn’t make it, poor thing.”
“Aw, bummer.
I would have loved to meet her.” Avery stands and moves around the table so she
can slip an arm around the woman’s shoulders and press their faces in together.
She can feel her shaking with excitement; hear her giddy, girlish laugh as she
lifts her phone to snap a selfie of the two of them together.
“Do you want
to film a quick video message for Mia?” Avery offers.
“Oh, would
you? That’d be amazing!”
Trish makes
an aggrieved noise and hefts a box. “Meg,” she says to her assistant. “Pack up
the rest of this. Avery”—pointed, sharp—“I’m calling the car. Be ready in five
minutes.”
“Good grief,”
Avery mutters as Trish clicks away in her stilettos. “You’d think she
was the one paying me.”
The fan
laughs, and swaps the phone to video mode. “You’re sure you don’t mind?”
“Of course
not. The whole point of writing books is making people’s days a little
brighter. Ready?” When the camera starts rolling, she waves at her own
pixelated face on the screen and says, “Hi, Mia! I’m so sorry I didn’t get to
meet you today, but your mom is the sweetest, and I hope you do great on your
finals!”
It sounds
trite, and insufficient. Avery doesn’t know if she’ll ever get the hang of
public sincerity. She does love meeting her fans; she keeps every card,
pores over every positive Instagram and X and Facebook comment. Still marvels
over the visible, physical excitement in readers when they wait in line for
hours to meet her. The interactions are all brief be necessity, and blur into a
bright smear of anxiety and gratitude that leaves Avery fervently going over
every benign but stupid thing she said afterward. Was she stiff? Weird? Did she
throw off a weird vibe? She hopes not, but has no confidence in her own public
persona.
This fan
seems happy, though, thanking her profusely and hugging her signed book to her
middle.
“You’re quite
welcome.” Avery waves her away and sees someone rushing toward the table.
The woman who
hurries down the rows of bookshelves is tiny, with a cap of close-cropped curls,
small, round-rimmed glasses, and a red scarf so large it flaps in her wake like
a split-in-half cape. She’s walking, but power walking, short strides quick,
quick, quick across the tiles, her clogs rapping out a staccato rhythm. One
hand holds her puffer coat closed across her chest, and the other clutches Avery’s
latest release: a fat hardback that’s regrettably difficult to hold over one’s
head while reading in bed.
An employee
steps into the aisle, waving his arms back and forth in a negating gesture. “Ma’am,
ma’am, excuse me, the store’s closed, you can’t come back here.”
“But I was
inside the door before ten,” she protests. She lifts her book. “Is Avery
Jamison still here? Can I—”
“I’m still
here,” Avery calls, and the woman’s head snaps her direction. Even from a
distance, here attention is laser-focused, sharp as an osprey’s.
The employee
starts to protest some more, but Avery smiles, and beckons. “It’s okay. She can
come on back.”
The employee
makes a face, but doesn’t argue. TBR—To Be Red, a cheeky, red-walled shop
bursting with books old and new, fresh lovingly tattered—is still considered a
new business, and Avery’s signing tonight pulled in their single largest day of
sales ever, according to the manager.
The woman
straightens her scarf, and herself, standing up to her full, insubstantial
height, and continues up to the table at a stately walk.
Up close,
Avery sees that she’s probably sixty or so, and that she has the biggest,
greenest eyes Avery’s ever seen, a bright spark in her gaze that contrasts the
eager friendliness of her smile.
“Hi,” Avery
says, reaching for the book. “What’s your name?”
“Selena
Flores, Miss Jamison, and I am thrilled to meet you.” She has a big,
strong voice for such a diminutive woman, her hands tiny, her nails squared off
and painted bright red to match her scarf. For reasons she’s never questioned,
and has always used to her writing advantage, everything about Selena Flores
plucks at Avery’s creative strings: sometimes you meet a person, and know
straight away that you’ve met not merely a passerby, but a potential character.
It’s a swift and sure vibration in the back of her mind, and it stirs to life
now.
Though her
face is tired from smiling for hours, it isn’t an effort to smile, now. “Well,
Miss Flores,” she says, spinning the book around and opening it up to the title
page. “I’m thrilled to meet you.”
“I didn’t
think they were going to let me in,” Selena says, as Avery selects and pen and
starts in on her swooping, professional signature. “I had to park down the
street, and ran all the way here, and then they were locking the door as I
arrived. I waved my ticket at them through the glass—my son bought me the
ticket for tonight, he’s a very thoughtful boy, though he would tell you he
isn’t, my little gentleman—and the manager came over, and I told her I was
dying to get my book signed, I have all of your books, all of them, even the
first ones! I know the new series is the popular one, good for you! How much
was the advance again? Several million, sí? It’s none of my business, I
shouldn’t ask. Eduardo, that’s my son, Eduardo would say that’s a rude thing to
ask, and so I won’t, forget I said it.”
Avery bites
back a laugh. Selena is a talker, barely a breath between run-on
sentences. Definitely a character.
“Your son
bought you the ticket? That was kind of him.”
“Oh, sí. He’s
very kind. And very smart, too. And handsome. Muy guapo, my Eduardo.” Her voice
takes on a sly lilt that Avery knows all too well. You’re single? I know the
perfect guy for you. When she glances up, she sees that Selena wears a sly
look to match. “He works so hard, all he does is work, day and night, and I
always tell him, ‘Mijo, you have to make time for living. For love.’ I want him
to find a nice girl. Someone warm and good to him.” She raps her nails on the
table edge and tilts her head, the sly look going positively devious. “Someone
like you.”
Avery laughs.
Awkwardly. “Oh, well, maybe he’ll meet someone soon.”
Selena’s
green eyes narrow, lips pursed in a way that promises mischief. “Maybe he will.
You’re in town for another week, aren’t you?”
The laugh
dies away. Avery says, with reluctance. “I am. I’m putting on a writing seminar,
but I don’t think I’ll have time for—oh. Okay.”
With a
magician’s flare, Selena plucks a small, white square from her jacket pocket
and flicks it to land face-up on the table in front of Avery. A business card,
delivered with the deadly accuracy of a Chinese throwing star.
Avery doesn’t
pick it up, but she catches bold, black copperplate lettering edged with gold.
Eduardo
Flores
Davidson
County Assistant District Attorney
Nashville,
TN
There’s a
downtown address and two phone numbers.
“You should
call him,” Selena says as she collects her signed book. She leans in, earnest,
firm, motherly as if she’s known Avery forever. “You’re just the sort of girl
he needs.”
“Ha. I don’t
know that—”
“No, you are!
I can tell from your books. You’re smart, and you’re sensitive. You’re keen.”
She lays a finger alongside her nose in a way that nearly startles a laugh from
Avery, so reminiscent is it of Santa Claus. “You could keep up with him. You’d
be a perfect match.”
Movement off
to the right signals Trish’s return, who looks thunderous that Avery’s still
sitting here talking to fans. Or one fan. One tiny, terrifying fan.
“I’m sure
he’s lovely,” Avery says, and stands. “It was so good to meet you, Selena. I’m
glad I got the chance to sign your book.”
“Me, too! I’m
thrilled, thrilled. You’re my favorite. I tell everyone I meet, ‘You
have to read Avery Jamison. Even the early stuff.” She wags a finger, miming the
orders she’s given to friends. “I don’t know why it took so long for some idiot
publisher to figure out you were a star. It’s ridiculous!”
“Avery,”
Trish says, coming to stand beside the table, Meg hanging meekly back in her
wake. “The car’s waiting.”
“I’m afraid I
have to go,” Avery tells Selena. “Thanks so much for coming.”
Selena
reaches forward and grips her wrist, lightly. Gives her another of those
earnest, maternal looks. “Thank you, dear.” She draws back, and nods down at
the business card. “And do think about calling Eduardo. I think you’d be good
together.”
Avery
scrounges up a smile. “Okay. Thanks.”
Book held
reverently in both arms, Selena heads for the door with an over the shoulder
wave.
When Avery
turns to Trish, she finds her publicist typing furiously on her phone, thumbs
flying. “What the hell was that?” Trish asks, without glancing up. She turns,
and Avery grabs up her jacket, her pens, and follows.
“A fan,” she
says, as she falls into step beside Meg. “She almost didn’t make the cutoff.”
“She didn’t,”
Trish says, disdainfully.
“I was still
here, though. I wanted to make sure everyone who bought a ticket got their book
signed.”
Trish waves a
dismissive gesture.
It isn’t
until after they’ve thanked the manager and pushed through the building’s rear
door that Avery spares a thought for the business card left behind on the
signing table. Then she spares a fleeting thought for Eduardo Flores, whose
mother is such an intense matchmaker she’s trying to force him together with an
author she spoke to for five minutes. Poor guy. Then she doesn’t think of
anything save her waiting hotel, and a hot shower.
~*~
Back in July,
Trish issued an official press release about the seminar, and then Avery echoed
it less professionally, and more personally, on her Instagram, inviting
aspiring authors and budding writers of all experience levels to sign up for a
special one week writing seminar that would focus on Avery’s specialty:
characterization.
Registration
was $150, there were fifty slots available, and tickets sold out in fourteen
minutes. Trish, and Avery’s agent Will, are already organizing another five
such seminars for next year, each to be held in a different city.
It makes her
head spin every time she stops to really think about it.
As does the
hotel they’re staying in for the week.
The Fitzroy opened
two months ago, the Nashville location the latest in a chain of increasingly
extravagant feats of construction. It’s octagon-shaped, its bedrooms,
ballrooms, shops, and spas built along the outer edges, the interior give over
to five acres of glassed atrium that boasts full-size trees planted in lush
landscaping beds, koi ponds, patios, gazebos, and walking trails done up to
look like the Smoky Mountains. There’s even a lazy river you can tube down, a
mill with a water wheel, black bear and mountain lion habitats as sophisticated
as those in any zoo. Guests can fish in an indoor pond, or eat at one of the
seven restaurants embedded within the wild-looking landscape. Each room has a
balcony that lets out into the atrium, so guests can sit and gaze across the
manmade vista.
Avery’s
seminar is to be held in Ballroom Two, which sits on the second floor, a wall
of windows overlooking the bass pond. She hopes her presentation is interesting
enough to compete with the view.
Meg checked
them in earlier in the afternoon before joining them at the bookshop, so when
they arrive at the Fitzroy, Trish whips out two keycards and passes one to
Avery. In an attempt not to look like a bumpkin tourist, Avery glances side to
side at the hotel’s splendor without turning her head. Sleek marble floors, and
more of the same cladding the walls. Huge flower arrangements in shoulder-height
urns. Businesspeople talking loudly into cellphones and children tugging
excitedly on their parents’ hands. She can hear a fountain rushing somewhere
nearby, and soft bluegrass music piping through unseen speakers.
“Attendants
are arriving at ten tomorrow morning,” Trish says as they reach the elevator
bank. In the bright gold plating of the doors, Avery and Meg look like students
flanking a teacher, and the sight makes Avery want to laugh. “So be sure to get
a good night’s sleep, and set a backup alarm. We’ll need to be up and ready to
go by eight. We can get in the room and start setting up at nine. Have your
clothes set out so—”
“Trish.”
Avery turns and offers a tired smile to which Trish responds with lifted brows.
“I know. I got this.”
Trish hmphs
as the elevator arrives with a ding and they step on board, but doesn’t offer
further instructions.
It’s a
silent, but not tense ride up to the fifth floor. Avery and Meg catch one
another’s gazes behind Trish’s back, and Meg crosses her eyes and makes a fish
face that forces Avery to hide a smile behind her hand. They’ve both grown used
to Trish’s…Trishness. Meg, unfortunately, takes the brunt of her whirlwind
force, and Avery can, sometimes, gently pat her back into place.
When the
elevator glides to a stop and the doors whisper open, they step into a quiet, floral-carpeted
hallway with inoffensive sconce lighting. Trish points toward the left, and
they make their way down to 503 and 504.
“Meg and I
are next door if you need something,” Trish says. “Sleep well.” She doesn’t
smile, but dips her head in farewell, and that’s the same thing for her.
“Night.”
Avery lets herself into her room, and lets out a deep, grateful sigh once she
heels the door shut.
She takes a
long, much-needed moment to lean back against the door and simply breathe. Lets
the solid wood panel hold the weight of her head and shoulders, and inhales the
scents of carpet cleaner and lemon bathroom solvent. The room is simple but
pretty, clean, with white coverlet and linens, soft-focus art on the walls, and
a splendid view of the fairy lights strung up in the trees beyond the balcony.
Avery loves
signings and meet-and-greets, but they’re draining. She was never an extrovert
growing up—hence her profession of choice—but hadn’t realized quite how much
energy this level of interpersonal interaction required until she was neck-deep
in it. Books, both the reading and writing of, had been an escape growing up.
She loves home, loved it through childhood and adolescence, but had found
herself perched on the seat of the Massey-Ferguson most evenings, gazing out
across the fields and dreaming of far-away places, of wild adventures, of
sweeping romances.
The reality
of creating those sorts of adventures and romances takes a mental toll,
however. And on tour, there’s nothing quite like finally closing the door on a
long and busy day, and basking in the quiet a little while.
She’s toeing
off her heels when her phone rings.
“Noooo,” she
murmurs as she pulls it out, and sees the caller’s ID. “Hi, Will.” She can
muster polite, but not cheery; her fans got every ounce of that today.
“How’d it
go?”
Will is a New
Yorker, born and raised, and doesn’t do small talk. He’s still warmer than
Trish, and can turn on the charm at a work function, unlike her, but is just as
brutally efficient.
“It went
well.” She bends to collect her shoes and sticks them on the floor of her
closet. She has slippers in her bag, and they’re calling her name. “We had a
few stragglers at the end, so Trish wasn’t happy about that.”
He snorts.
“But the
manager said we had three-hundred people turn up, so that’s amazing.”
“Only
three-hundred?”
She rolls her
eyes as she unzips her rolling suitcase. “Three-hundred’s a lot.”
“Not a number
one bestseller.” He sounds offended.
“It’s a small
shop, and it was full to bursting at six p.m. It was a good event, Will. I’m
happy with it.”
A knock
sounds at her door, quiet and unobtrusive. Meg, then.
“You’re happy
about everything,” Will says. “It’s a real problem.”
“So you keep
saying.” The slippers aren’t in the front pocket, she doesn’t know where they
are, actually, and the knock sounds again, so she abandons the search and goes
to answer it. “I’ll be in your neck of the woods in a couple weeks—”
“Neck of the
woods. You’re a hick.”
“Thank you.”
She lays the accent on extra thick just to hear his disgusted noise as she
turns the doorknob. “I think—”
Pain explodes
in her nose, between her eyes. A hot burst of it that blinds her immediately.
The door, she thinks, wildly, it’s the edge of
the door. Then pain strikes her toes, and her chest, and she’s shoved back,
hard. Dizzy, vision clouded, she staggers, trips, and falls.
She lands on
her elbow, and her whole arm goes numb. If she makes any kind of noise, screams
or whimpers, she can’t hear it over the pounding of her pulse in her ears.
It’s not
Meg, oh God, it’s not Meg,
she has time to think, before something strikes her in the side of the head.
Time slides
sideways. There’s darkness. Loss.
When she next
becomes aware of her surroundings, she’s being lugged somewhere like a sack of
laundry. There’s a fist tight in her hair, and a huge, punishing hand gripping
her upper arm, and her bare feet drag and bump over a cold, rough surface. Concrete.
That’s her first rational thought. The ground that scuffs her toes and catches
on her toenails is concrete. It’s…stairs.
It’s stairs.
Her eyes slam
open, and despite the awful, ringing pain in her head, she can make out cold
fluorescent light, and a steel handrail. Yes, she’s in a stairwell. A service
stairwell.
She’s being
dragged down the hotel service stairwell.
Oh God, oh
God, oh God.
Adrenaline
floods her system, blotting out the pain, rallying her with a surge of urgency.
This can’t be happening, it can’t be. She has to get away.
She thinks of
home, of the weight of her dad’s shotgun, and old coffee cans pinging off the
hitching rail, and the farm hands’ cheers. Thinks of tussling with a stubborn
hog, and that one time she misjudged the gate timing and the Hereford bull
bowled her over, slammed her up against the corral panels and bloodied her
nose. Thinks of Mom’s hands shaping hers on the reins: whatever happens,
don’t let go.
It's that
more than anything, the memory of landing on her hip in the arena sand, Charger
snorting and squealing and dragging her, because she refused to let go of the
reins, and so she didn’t land on her head. When he started backpedaling, he
pulled her to her feet, and then she dusted herself off, calmed him down, and
swung back up into the saddle.
Whatever
happens, don’t let go.
She needs to grab
onto something first.
She blinks
her vision somewhat clearer, and sees they’ve arrived at a landing. She takes a
deep breath and flattens her feet against the floor. The concrete scrapes at
her bare soles, but the pain is secondary to panic. Just like every time she
fell off a horse, or got trampled by a bull, or that one time a goat
head-butted her, the need to act overrides all physical discomfort.
One of
Avery’s arms is held tight, but the other is free, and she swings it back, hard
and sudden, and grabs a fistful of fabric. The man holding her is wearing
something plush, a hoodie, maybe, or a soft-shell jacket. She curls her fingers
tight in it, and yanks hard as she twists and bucks and throws herself out of
his grasp.
“What the
fuck?” he exclaims. He has a raspy smoker’s voice, and a thick Southern accent,
all his consonants round and indistinct.
In his shock,
his grip on her arm loosens, and Avery falls.
Or she would,
if she didn’t have a fistful of his sleeve clenched in her left hand. She
swings around instead, landing hard on her butt, feet tangled with his, and
through the crazy concussion-swirl of her compromised vision, she catches a
glimpse of his face.
A beanie and
the pulled-up hood of his jacket conceals his hair, forehead, ears. But she
sees that he’s white, and broad-jawed, with a patchy dark beard and eyebrows
thick as wooly bear caterpillars over brown eyes that look black and frightened
in the glare of the tube lights. It’s his fear—fear verging on panic—that
strikes her most.
Why is he
afraid of her?
Shaking
terribly, she uses her hold on him to pull herself up.
And he slaps
her hard across the face.
Something
cold and sharp pops her lip, a bright spot of pain, and her cheek and jaw bloom
with cold, and then heat. Her head cracks to the side, and something in her
neck lights up with agony.
“Stupid
bitch,” he growls in a voice she’ll never forget. His palm is smooth with old
calluses, cold as a slab of meat when it closes around her throat and squeezes.
“I’m gonna fuckin’ kill you.”
“Hey!”
someone shouts from above. “Hey, what are you doing?” The rap of shoes clatters
down the stairs toward them.
Avery can’t
call for help, can only croak, and then gasp, as his hand tightens further, and
black spots crowd her vision.
Pain snaps
through her torso.
Something in
her shoulder wrenches and the agony of it amasses the black spots into a
curtain; she can’t see at all.
But she feels
the heat of sour breath on her face, the tickle of it in her ear. “You think
you’re so special,” he whispers. Spit flecks her neck. “But you’re nothing but
a redneck whore. You deserve every bit of what’s comin’ to you.”
There’s one
last detonation of pain inside her skull, and then nothing.
2
Captain Regis
is on the phone when Heidi pokes her head in his office door, but he waves her
in.
“Yes, of
course, Mr. Mayor. We’re all excited about it,” he says, tone solicitous, eyes
rolling and hand doing the yada-yada flap.
Heidi smirks
at him and drops down into one of the two chairs across from the desk.
“Yes. Yes.
Uh-huh. I’ll make sure they’re all there. Of course. No, thank you, Mr.
Mayor. Buh-bye.” He cradles the phone and then sinks back in his chair, both
hands pushing through his hair. “Jesus Christ, I hate that shit.”
“But you
sounded so excited about it talking to Mr. Mayor.”
He sends her
a narrow look that, as a rookie, left her shaking in her boots, but which now
makes her laugh and offer her palms in a bid for peace.
“Sorry,
sorry. How is the benefit coming along? Seriously.”
Regis leans
farther back, kicks his boots up onto the corner of his desk, and sighs again,
hands linked together over his stomach. He’s built like an old school cowboy,
tall, rangy, with big hands and feet that move with graceful competence. The
sort with a narrow, but masculine jaw, and a ruddy, wind-lined complexion. He
gets thinner as he gets older, without the extra padding so common in men of
his age and profession. His hair was still mostly black when Heidi met him, and
now it’s the white of bleached bone, but still thick, his hairline as bold as
ever. He dresses as a police captain should, suit and tie, pressed shirts. But
he does wear Tony Llama boots, his one concession to a past he refuses to admit
to.
(Marcus is
convinced he was a ranch hand. Jillian swears he was a country singer. Heidi
knows, thanks to a tipsy confession from his wife two Christmases ago, that spent
his teenage years working as a rodeo clown in Texas. The photos are hilarious.)
“It’s going
fine, I guess.” He shrugs. “It’s just a buncha bullshit.”
“It’s for a
good cause.”
“Cutting a
check would be a better cause. Why you’ve gotta spend all that money on dinner,
and dancing, and dressing up.” He shakes his head. “It’s a waste. Just give it
to the kids instead.”
Heidi grins.
“But Sheila’s enjoying it, right?”
For every
inch that Regis embodies the John Wayne aesthetic, Sheila Regis is all glam,
nothing but bubbles and Louboutins. Regis likes to play the long-suffering
husband, but Heidi knows his devotion runs deep.
He makes a
face and says, grudgingly, “Yeah. Damn it.” He shakes his head, dismissing the
topic of the benefit, and sits forward, hands on the desk. “Alright, what did
you need? Did you send the Bradley case notes to Flores?”
Heidi sobers,
momentary good mood evaporating. “I did, yeah. And he’s working on a warrant
for Miguel Gonzales’s phone records.”
“Good.” His
brows lift, expectant. He knows she wouldn’t sit and wait for him to get off
the phone to relay such simple messages.
He’s right.
“Speaking of
the Gonzales case… I wanted to talk to you about McCoy.”
A muscle in
Regis’s cheek twitches, but he doesn’t look surprised. “What about him?”
Heidi’s spent
several days considering how she wants to phrase this. Regis has a unique
ability to reduce her to the eager-puppy rookie uniform cop she once was, and
she instead wants to sound like the forty-two-year-old seasoned detective she
is. She also doesn’t want to heap any shit on McCoy’s head. He’s not a bad
person, and not even a bad cop, but…
“Sir—”
“Uh oh. I
know it’s serious if you’re busting out ‘sir.’”
“Captain. I
know that McCoy is energetic, and that he has good intentions. But I’m not sure
if he’s a good fit with the rest of the squad.”
There. It’s
out there. None of them have said it in so many words, but they’ve all been
thinking it; have traded knowing glances and subtle eye rolls. Heidi nominated
herself to bring it to Captain Regis on the basis she’d handle it with the
lightest touch.
Regis regards
her a long, silent moment, with that flat, cowboy, poker table stare that’s
elicited countless interrogation room confessions. “He’s not a good fit,” he
deadpans, finally. “That’s what you’re going with?”
“Captain—”
He holds up a
hand. “I know McCoy’s still wet behind the ears.”
“He’s
insensitive.”
“He’s young,
and a bit of a cowboy, I’ll grant.”
She lifts her
brows.
“Hey, I know
from cowboys,” he says, and one corner of his mouth tugs in a reluctant smile.
Then he grows serious again. “He’s a rookie. Rookies make mistakes. Have any of
them been disastrous?”
She swallows
a sigh.
“Has he used
excessive force? Mishandled evidence? Endangered his partner?”
His partner,
for the moment, being Heidi. “No.” She wants to argue further, but she won’t. He’s
obnoxious and tactless doesn’t mean much if he can handle the brass tacks
of the job itself.
Regis gives
her his Captain Look another moment, then eases back in his chair, face
softening—as much as it’s capable. “Aw, hell. I know he’s annoying. But he’s
got a spotless service record as a uni, and, at heart, he’s a good kid.”
A headache’s
blooming between Heidi’s brows. She massages at it. “I know. Shit, yeah, I
know.”
“I paired him
up with you because I think, more than anyone, you have the most to teach him.”
“I know.”
The grin
threatens again. “That’s a compliment, in case you didn’t catch it.”
“I know,”
she huffs, but feels her own smile tugging. “I’m sorry.” She stands. “Can we
just forget I came in here? I’m…” She waves a dismissal. “Sleep deprived, or
something.”
“Or
something.” His expression softens another fraction. He looks almost kindly,
like that, with the seven-a.m. silver sun peeking in at the blinds behind him. “You’re
due some time off.”
“Aren’t we
all?”
“Heidi.” Not
pleading, but firm. Wanting her to put in for vacation. It’s an old song and
dance between them: he tells her to, she says she will, and then she never
does.
“I hear you.”
A rap sounds
at the door, and it swings open to reveal McCoy. Marcus, or Jillian, or Dan would
ask if they were interrupting. Would read the fine threads of tension strung
across the desk.
Not McCoy. He
says, “Hey, Cap.” Then: “Hey, Coop, we got a call. Vic at the hospital.”
“Okay. Let’s
go.”
As she
follows him out of the office, she glances back and catches Regis’s wink. She
wrinkles her nose in response and pulls the door shut behind her.
The bullpen’s
its usual morning beehive of activity. Phones trilling, detectives moving
between their desks and the break room. Copiers humming, printers chugging.
Jillian
glances up from her computer as they walk past. “I heard about the call. You
want me to tag along?” Her head tips toward McCoy meaningfully. “The vic’s a
woman, and she’s, uh…” She lowers her voice to a near whisper, so Heidi has to
pause to hear her. “Famous.”
“A celebrity?
Who? A singer?”
“No,” Jillian
starts, and McCoy whirls around, face lit up like Christmas.
“Oh man, no,
not a singer.” He claps his hands together, walking backward, and nearly trips
over someone’s desk chair legs. “It’s Avery Jamison.”
“Who?”
McCoy has one
of those earnest, handsome farm boy faces which telegraphs every expression to
near-comic heights. His brows shoot up, and his mouth drops open. “You don’t
know who Avery Jamison is?”
“No, McCoy,”
Heidi says. “Who is she?”
“An author,”
Jillian says.
McCoy says,
“She’s like, the author right now. How have you not heard of her? Across
the Bridge? Never Look Back? She wrote—”
“You know
what?” Heidi shoos him along. “Tell me on the way.”
“Have fun,
you two,” Jillian sing-songs behind them.
“Okay, catch
me up,” Heidi says once they’re in the Crown Vic and she’s cranked the engine.
McCoy shifts
in his seat, half-turned toward her, both hands held out in front of him like
he’s about to tackle someone. He’s a hand-talker, this one. “Right, so. Avery
Jamison came out of nowhere, like, three years ago. That’s what it seemed like.
Her first book—not really her first, but I’ll get back to that—dropped, The
Last Word, and it just blew up. My sister’s a big fan, and she was obsessed
with it. It’s this mafia versus cop action story with this kinda kinky, hot and
heavy romance element. I mean: it’s dirty. Like, damn.
“But anyway,
the book comes out, and it goes straight to number one, and then she turns it
into a series, and she’s a total sensation. Three of her books have already
been optioned for movies, and she’s got a whole bunch of copycats popping up.
Girl made fifty million last year alone. Holy shit, can you believe it?
“But get
this,” he continues, after sucking in a big breath. “The Last Word
wasn’t her first book. Before she got discovered, she was this farm chick from Nebraska.
Her parents raise cattle and shit. She’d been writing books for, like, seven
years. Westerns. Isn’t that wild? Then she wrote mafia porn and, boom, multi-millionaire.”
Heidi hits
the turn signal and regrets not grabbing a coffee to go. “That’s fascinating,
McCoy,” she says, “but I meant: what happened to land her in the hospital?”
“Oh.” He
whips out his phone, without seeming embarrassed and contrite for having missed
her initial question, and opens his Notes app. “Vic is Avery Jamison,
thirty-five, Caucasian female. A guest at the Fitzroy hotel walked up on
someone attacking her in the stairwell. The guest scared the guy off, and Avery
was unconscious when he reached her. In his words, she was ‘beat to hell.’ She
arrived at the hospital shortly after eleven p.m., and they worked on her all
night. I don’t have the full rundown from the docs yet, but apparently she’s
awake, and expected to make a full recovery.”
“We’re only
just now getting the call?”
“Uniforms
responded at midnight, and talked to her publicist. There was some kinda brawl downtown
that pulled them away, wires got crossed, you know the drill.”
“Right.
What’re are next steps?” She likes to quiz him, and, even if he’s caustically
enthusiastic about far too many things, he does know his stuff.
“Talk to the
doctor,” he says, ticking items off on his fingers, “take Avery’s statement,
hit the hotel for witnesses and security footage.”
“Right.” The
boxy white tower of Nashville General slides into view as they crest the next
hill, and Heidi merges into the turn lane. “When we get to Avery’s room, let me
take the lead.”
“Yeah.” His
tone heavily implies a duh.
She darts a
glance across the car at him as they wait for the turn light to go green, and
sees the small, displeased tuck in the corner of his mouth. “I’m serious, McCoy.
I know you’re a fan of hers—”
“My sister’s
a fan. I never said I was.”
“Still. Let’s
keep things professional.”
He nods, but
looks unhappy about it, and Heidi feels like his mother. Damn.
~*~
Heidi’s
worked with Dr. Lessing hundreds of times, and there’s no need for a long
preamble or awkward small talk. He’s between patients, and walks with them from
the ER desk down the hall to Avery Jamison’s room.
“Two cracked
ribs, dislocated shoulder, ligature marks on her throat, split lip, a cracked
orbital bone, and multiple contusions on her face. The most concerning injury
is the concussion. We ran a CT last night, and so far we don’t see signs of a
bleed. We want to monitor her another twelve hours, but then she should be good
to go home,” Lessing tells them.
“Any signs of
sexual assault?” Heidi asks.
“No.”
“Doesn’t mean
he wasn’t planning one,” McCoy says. When Heidi shoots him a look, he shrugs.
“What? Guy got interrupted, right? Who knows what he was going to do.”
“Avery,
hopefully.”
Lessing stops
in front of a closed door.
“She’s
awake?”
“As of twenty
minutes ago, yes,” Lessing says. “She’s on pain medication, but she still seems
lucid.”
Heidi nods.
“Thanks, Brian.”
He nods and
hustles off to his next patient.
Hand on the
doorknob, Heidi gives McCoy one last look.
He lifts his
hands. “I’ll be good. Scout’s honor.”
“Were you in
the Scouts?”
He grins.
“Nah. 4-H, though. My cow blue ribboned at the State Fair one year.”
The problem
with McCoy is that no matter how much he annoys you, he’s likeable as hell.
Heidi manages
to keep her smile in check, knocks, and lets them into the room.
Two women are
on their feet: a mousy-haired girl with a water pitcher in her hands, poised
halfway between the room’s sink and the bed. She freezes when they enter, her
gaze wild and big-eyed as it swings toward the door.
The other
woman is tall, pencil thin, with a sharp, sleek black bob and burgundy
lipstick. Her gray suit is rumpled, doubtless from spending the night in
hospital chairs, but her makeup is fresh and her eyes flash with leashed
aggression.
“Are you the
detectives? Finally. Where have you been?” she demands, hands on her
hips.
“Trish,” a
soft voice calls from the bed. “I’m sure they got here as soon as they could.”
The
woman—Trish—huffs in annoyance. Cocks a brow. “Did you?” she asks them.
“We got the
call ten minutes ago, ma’am, and came straight here,” McCoy says in a
solicitous, Southern good boy voice that doesn’t melt the woman’s icy exterior,
but which thoroughly impresses Heidi. Good job, kid.
“Trish, is
it?” Heidi asks. “I’m Detective Cooper and this is Detective McCoy. If she’s
feeling up to it, we’d like to ask Avery a few questions.”
Trish gives
them the stink eye another moment, then steps aside, and moves to a chair up by
the head of the bed. “She needs to rest, but I want you to catch this guy.”
“So do we,”
Heidi agrees, and gets her first real look at Avery Jamison.
To put it
bluntly, she’s a mess.
If she’s a
pretty girl, it’s impossible to tell now, her face a mass of purpling bruises,
her lip split and bisected with a jagged row of stitches. Her left eye is
swollen shut, a tight, painful-looking egg. Her other eye might be blue, or
green, but there’s a broken vessel that’s filled the sclera with red, so it’s
hard to tell. Dark hair falls in two lank curtains on either side of her face,
framing the red ligature marks around her throat; there’s the clear shapes of large
fingers pressed in a necklace of bruising.
The head of
the bed’s propped up, and her left arm is strapped across her chest in a sling.
Someone has tucked the blankets neat and tight across her waist, and the
mousy-haired girl pours a cup of water that she then offers forward, hand
holding a straw so Avery won’t have to manage the vessel with her one good
hand.
Avery starts
to shake her head and then stops with a quick, indrawn breath that lifts her
ribs inside her gown; that sets off a fresh wave of pain, one she bites back
with lips pressed tight together, breathing sharp and shallow through her
nostrils.
Privately,
Heidi thought the only reason detectives were being called in was because the
vic is a wealthy celebrity. Standing here now, looking at Avery, she amends her
opinion: they’re dealing with an attempted murder. That’s what their A.D.A.,
Flores, is going to run with, anyway, when they get around to charging a
suspect.
“It’s okay,
Meg,” Avery says with obvious effort, and sags back against her pillow. “I’ll
have some in a minute.”
The girl
retreats with the cup, brow knit with worry.
Avery shifts
her head, but slowly, and with pain and tension etched in the lines of her
battered face. Her throat jerks as she swallows, and she winces again. “Thank
you for coming, detectives.”
McCoy makes a
very quiet noise: disgust, anger. Heidi feels his sleeve shift against hers,
and a glance proves he’s balled his hand into a fist.
She feels the
same, but she’s spent nearly two decades on the job learning to turn that anger
at a suspect into gentleness for victims.
“Hi, Avery.” Heidi
steps in closer to the bed, leaving McCoy to take up a stance down near the
foot of it. “Do you feel okay to talk to us?”
Avery’s good
eye flutters, but she opens it again, and firms her jaw. “Yes.” Her voice is
raspy, like her throat’s sore. Up close, the handprint on her neck looks
bolder, darker. Heidi knows all too well how hard her assailant must have
squeezed to leave behind a bruise this vivid after such a short time.
“Okay,” Heidi
says, “start with your arrival at the hotel and walk us through the sequence of
events.”
“We left the
bookshop at quarter after ten,” Trish cuts in. “Later than we should have
thanks to stragglers.”
Heidi turns
to find her typing away on a phone. “Actually, Trish, we need to hear the story
directly from Avery.”
Thumbs still
flying, Trish shoots a narrow, dark look over the top of her iPhone. “I was
with her up until the attack. She’s in pain, she’s on meds—”
“Trish,”
Avery says. Still raspy, still exhausted, but with a firm undercurrent. One
that actually snaps Trish’s mouth shut with a click of teeth. The woman’s bob
flares in a batwing arc as she snaps her head around to look at Avery. “Would
you mind updating my parents? I want them to hear about this before it hits the
news.” When Trish only stares, her mouth twitches in a sad attempt at a smile.
“I’ll be fine with the detectives. Please.”
Trish’s mouth
does a brisk side-to-side twitch, then she stands in a flurry and ducks around
them, barely avoiding a shoulder-to-shoulder collision with Heidi. She doesn’t
slam the door on her way out, but it’s a near thing.
The other
girl drops down into a chair in the corner with a shaky exhale.
Avery says,
“Trish is my publicist. She’s very good at her job, and she’s been really good
here at the hospital. She’s trying to look out for me, but…”
“She’s kind
of a fire-breathing dragon?” McCoy says.
Avery’s good
eye widens, and a jerky, choked laugh bursts out of her mouth before she groans
and screws her eye shut in pain. She smiles, though, despite the way the
stitches tug her at her lower lip.
Heidi snaps
her fingers in McCoy’s face and points to the chair Trish abandoned.
He rolls his
eyes, but sits. “I’m just trying to lighten the mood.”
“Uh-huh, save
it for 4-H. Avery, please excuse my partner. Do you need some water? A nurse?”
Seeming
recovered as recovered as she can be she opens her eyes and says, “No, I’m
good.” With her good hand, she gestures limply toward the other girl. “This is
Meg, Trish’s assistant.”
“Hi,” Meg
says, and waves at them with her hand tucked inside the sleeve of her hoodie.
“Hi, Meg.
We’ll get statements from you, and Trish, after this,” Heidi says. “Okay,
Avery. You left the bookshop at ten-fifteen?”
“Yeah—yes.”
It’s a delayed catch, a faint brush of an accent quickly smoothed with
formality. “There was an Uber waiting for us behind the shop. Trish and Meg…” Pain
glazes her features, and she pushes past it. “Had already loaded the swag and
our bags. It was an SUV, a Toyota Highlander, I think. Yeah—yes. Dark red.
Cranberry. Tan interior. The driver said his name was Sam.”
McCoy’s
taking notes on the pad from his breast pocket. “That’s detailed.” He sounds
impressed.
Avery lifts
her good shoulder in a shrug. “Writer,” she says, by way of explanation.
“The Uber
took you straight to the hotel?” Heidi asks.
Avery
swallows in a painful looking way, and Meg gets up from her chair and offers
the water again. This time, Avery takes a few sips, then grimaces. “Yeah.” Formality
set aside. But not the details. “He dropped us off right at the portico out
front, and we went through the main lobby. Took a right. Went to the elevators.
We were the only ones in the cab when it arrived. Straight up to the fifth
floor. Rooms—” She takes a deep, gasping breath, and pain grips her by the jaw,
peels her lips back. Her ribs, Heidi assumes. Or maybe everything.
“Five-oh-three and five-oh-four. I was in four. I—I let myself in.” Another sip
of water. “Took off my shoes. I was going to the closet to get my slippers out
of my bag when my phone rang. It was Will, my agent.”
“Will Patterson,”
Meg says. “I can get you his information, if you want it.”
Heidi nods
and McCoy jots down the name.
“There was a
knock,” Avery continues. “I thought…” Her one-eyed gaze shifts to Meg, then
shakes away, and lands somewhere in the middle distance. Heidi’s seen that sort
of withdrawal before: falling back into the crisis moment, questioning oneself,
asking if she should have known better. “I thought it was Meg, or maybe Trish.
We’d just parted in the hall, and I thought…”
She shakes
her head, an aborted half-shake again, and grits her teeth against what has to
be a monster headache. “It was stupid. I was stupid. I was on the phone,
and I wasn’t be careful, and I opened the door, and he just slammed me right in
the face with it.”
“You weren’t
stupid,” Heidi says, soothingly, as the shallow, quick sound of Avery’s
breathing swells and fills the small room. “You had no way of knowing who was
out there.” Yes, she should have checked through the peephole, but she was
distracted, tired. Heidi sees it far too often: people get busy, and they get
comfortable, and they stop being cautious.
“He barged
in, and he must have hit me in the head. I blacked out for a minute, and I…”
“It’s okay.
Take your time.”
Avery frowns,
and presses on. “When I came to, he was dragging me down the stairs, and I
thought…”
Meg offers
the water, but Avery lifts her good hand and waves her off.
“I just
thought…” Avery says, slowly, whether from pain or a struggle with memory,
Heidi doesn’t know. “I couldn’t let this happen. I had to fight him. ‘Don’t let
go.’” Before Heidi can ask, Avery turns her head and meets her gaze. Even with
only one good eye, and with a battered face swollen out of shape and mottled
with darkening bruises, there’s something arresting about the eye contact. Like
Avery’s seeing right through her concerned cop mask and glimpsing all the
snakes in her head.
It's
unnerving.
“That’s what
my mom always said when a horse threw me. She said, ‘Whatever happens, don’t
let go.’” She turns away—Heidi breathes an internal sigh of relief—and says,
self-deprecating. “I don’t know. That’s stupid, too, I guess, in this
situation. But I grabbed hold of him, and I threw myself away from him, and it
must have shocked him, because he dropped me.
“When I fell,
I swung around. I had his sleeve.” She demonstrates with her good hand. “I got
a look at his face. It was just quick, before he slammed me up against the wall
and…” She gestures to her face, her throat, her shoulder. “But he
looked…scared.”
“Scared?”
McCoy asks. “Of you?”
“Yeah, I
don’t know. Maybe that I would get away. I tried, but, obviously I didn’t.” She
blinks rapidly, and the way her face sags is eloquent of shame.
“You did
great, Avery,” Heidi said, and earns a disbelieving huff. “No, really. Most
people panic and freeze. They can’t even try to fight back.”
“Some good it
did me.”
“It did,”
Heidi insists. “You’re here. You’re alive.”
Avery stills,
and her gaze flicks back.
“Did he say
anything? Did you recognize him?”
“I’d never
seen him before. But he said, ‘You think you’re so special, but you’re nothin’
but a redneck whore. You deserve every bit of what’s comin’ to you.’”
“Jesus,”
McCoy says. “And you didn’t know him personally?”
“No.” Avery
turns to him, and beneath the injuries, Heidi gets her first glimpse of the
pretty woman she is. Pretty, and cautious, and haunted. “But I know the words.”
To Heidi, she says, “They’re lines from my latest book.”
3
In the early
days of his uniform career, Caleb McCoy was accused more than once of being
“too fucking happy.” He’s the only one smiling in their Academy photos; the one
who cracked the most jokes on the job, trying to lighten the mood. He thinks of
himself as optimistic, rather than happy. He sees some ugly shit in this line
of work, but life, in general, is pretty damn beautiful. There’s always a
bright side, always a silver lining. Even the worst of days ends.
He knows that
most of his colleagues, both during his uniform years and now that he’s a
detective, think he’s naïve, maybe even childish, and destined for a rude
awakening. But Caleb likes to think—no, he knows—that his optimistic
streak is immediately disarming when it comes to dealing with the public, from
vics, to witnesses, to suspects. Whether it soothes, startles, or engages
someone, his energy is never expected, and always yields results.
Trish Wheatly
is going to be a challenge, though.
They stand at
the entrance to the parking deck, up on the curb out of the flow of traffic,
and Trish works on a cigarette like it’s an assigned task and she’s mad about
it: quick, harsh drags and forceful dragon exhales through her nostrils. Heidi
stayed inside to talk to Meg—good call, honestly—and when Caleb asked if he
could talk to Trish, she said, “Outside. I need a smoke.”
“Did you see
anyone in the hallway when you headed to your rooms?” Caleb asks. He’s got his
notebook out, still, because Trish is the sort who won’t talk to him unless she
thinks he’s taking things seriously. “Someone coming in or out of a room?
Loitering? Even a housekeeping or room service cart?”
“No, nobody,”
she addresses a stand of shrubs, tone impatient, lips twitching around the cig
filter on her next drag. “The hall was totally empty. I let us into our room
the same time Avery went into hers, and didn’t see anyone else.”
“Avery says
the knock on her door happened just a couple minutes after she got inside. Did
you hear anything from next door? Did she cry out? Could you hear the guy
bumping around?”
Caleb wonders
if she always turns her head in sharp movements, like a bird, or if it’s
exaggerated today because she’s upset about her client. Either way, it’s
unnerving. She turns to him, exhales smoke, and says, “Don’t you think I would
have checked on her if I heard something?”
“I don’t know
what you’d do, ma’am,” he says, bluntly. “I’m not here to judge, I’m just
trying to establish a timeline. When did you realize Avery wasn’t in her room?”
Her eyes
narrow, and her lips purse, but after a beat, she takes another drag and turns
her head away, bob swinging. In a slightly less hostile tone, she says, “The
second we got in the room, I started the shower. I didn’t hear anything.” True
regret touches her voice, draws it down an octave, and quivers its edges.
Caleb wonders
if she’s a hard person who softens rarely, or if she started out soft and built
a shell around herself, for personal or professional reasons.
“I was
toweling off when Meg starts pounding on the door. She said a man, a guest,
came running down the hell, yelling, knocking on doors, saying he found a woman
being attacked in the stairwell. By the time I threw on some clothes, the
paramedics were on the scene. Avery was…” She shakes her head, and picks at her
teeth with a long, manicured nail before taking another drag. “I’ve seen people
walk away from car crashes look in better shape.”
Her heads
turns back toward him, another abrupt movement. “The man who did this to
her…when I get my hands on him…”
“I get it,”
Caleb says. “Whoever it is needs his ass kicked”—Heid would not like
that—“but let us handle him. You can help us by sharing any information that
could lead to his arrest.”
She nods, and
drops the cig butt to the concrete. Grinds it out beneath her expensive shoe.
“Now, Avery
told us that her attacker quoted a line from her own book to her before he
knocked her unconscious.”
For the first
time, Trish’s angular, harsh face softens, eyes widening and brows lifting in
shock. “He what?”
“It was
something like ‘You’re a redneck whore, and you deserve what’s coming to you.’”
She sucks in
a breath, and says, “Jesus,” on the exhale. “That’s from her latest. All
Fall Down. The heroine is from Alabama, and she’s taking on this mob boss
in New York…holy shit.” Her eyes flash. “I thought this was some random
shitbag, but this was personal.”
“Looks that
way. Do you know anyone who might have a vendetta against Avery? Someone who’d
want to hurt her?”
Trish’s
expression hardens down into its former cut-glass angles. “Clearly, you don’t
follow her on social media.”
~*~
“I came ahead
to the hotel and checked us in,” Meg says, clutching a paper cup of tea at one
of the small, round tables in the waiting area just down the hall from Avery’s
room. “Around two o’clock. I got our keycards, and took the bags up to the
rooms.”
“Is that
something you normally do on tour?” Heidi asks.
“Yes, ma’am.
Trish doesn’t like to wait around to check in. She likes to go straight from
the venue to the hotel.” She releases her cup to tug both sleeves down over her
hands, then jams them together on the tabletop. She only meets Heidi’s gaze in
fits and bursts, lashes lowering every few seconds.
Trish doesn’t
like a lot of things, Heidi figures.
“So you put
the bags in the room,” Heidi prompts. She can ask question after question, but
finds she gets a more accurate timeline if the interviewee can relate the story
in their own words, at their own speed.
Meg nods. “I
put the bags in the closets, made sure there were enough towels. Then I locked
up and called an Uber. I went back to the bookshop, and got there about thirty
minutes before the signing started.”
“That would
be, what, five-thirty?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Meg, when
you were at the hotel, did you see anyone in the hall? Or maybe in the
elevator? A man hanging around, watching you? Maybe you got the feeling you
were being watched. Anything like that?”
“No, ma’am.”
She tugs her cuffs some more, rolling their edges deep into her palms. “There
was a family in the elevator with me, parents and two kids. But nobody who
looked suspicious or anything.” She chews at her lip, and braves eye contact
again. “But the hotel has cameras, right? Can you find him that way?”
“We’re
certainly going to take a look at the footage. But. In the meantime: can you
think of anyone who might want to hurt, or even scare Avery? If her attacker
quoted her book to her, then he knows who she is, and this was a targeted
attack, rather than one of opportunity.”
Meg looks
stricken, already pale face whitening. “It was? Targeted, I mean?”
“A random
mugger wouldn’t throw lines from her own book at her,” Heidi says, as gently as
possible.
Meg takes a
shuddering breath and cups a sleeve-covered hand over her mouth. Turns her head
and murmurs, “Oh my God.”
The back of
Heidi’s neck tingles, a familiar prickling of finding a thread, catching a
lead. “What? Did you think of something?”
“Maybe. I
don’t know.” When Meg glances back at her, she looks guilty, almost. “Avery…she
has lots of fans. Tons of them. But there’s also lots of people who hate how
successful she is.”
Heidi lifts
her brows. “Any people specifically?”
“I think you
need to look at her email and social media.”
~*~
A drowsy, but
determined Avery gives them all her social media and email passwords, and then
Trish all but shoos them out the door with a firm demand that they “find this
prick.”
Back at the
station, Jillian takes the list of passwords and immediately gets to work.
“He knew
which room she was in,” Marcus says, sitting back against the edge of his desk,
arms crossed loosely over his chest. Heidi once overheard two young female
uniforms whispering to one another that he looks like Idris Elba, and the
resemblance is never stronger than when his shirtsleeves are folded back like
they are now, and he’s casually reclining in a way that highlights how many
hours he spends at the gym. “For him to knock that fast after she got inside,
he had eyes on her.”
“She, and her
publicist, and the publicist’s assistant say they didn’t see anyone in the
elevator, or the hallway when they arrived,” Heidi says, and turns to white
board, marker in hand to start shaping the case in bold black Expo marker.
She imagines
Marcus’s shrug based on his voice. “He could have taken the next elevator.
Could have got out in the hall right as their doors were closing.”
“That’s a
stretch,” Jillian says, keyboard clacking away.
“Okay, so,
how did he know her room number?” Marcus has a deep, resonant voice, endlessly
patient, and plays devil’s advocate in a way that heightens the team’s thought
process, instead of stifling it.
“Maybe he
works at the hotel,” McCoy says. He’s tossing a rubber ball up into the air
over and over, the smack of it in his palm oddly satisfying.
Much more so
than the squeak of the marker Heidi’s using.
“He’s
security,” McCoy continues. “Or at the check-in desk. He knows she’s gonna be
there, knows her room number, bam.”
“What does
the security footage show?” Marcus asked.
“We pulled
it, and it’s with the lab, now,” Heidi says, and then steps back from what
she’s written. “Okay, so.” She taps the board with the end of the marker.
“Here’s our timeline: Avery, Trish, and Meg all flew in together from Salt Lake
City. They arrived at four-fifteen yesterday afternoon, and parted ways at the
airport. Avery and Trish went straight to TBR bookshop to start setting up for
the signing, and Meg went to the Fitzroy to check them in and put their
suitcases in their rooms. Meg then Ubered to the bookshop and joined them,
where they stayed until ten-fifteen or so. Dinner was delivered to them during
the event, so none of them ever stepped outside the shop until they left.
“Then, they
took an Uber back to the hotel, entered through the lobby, took the elevator
up, and went straight into their rooms. None of them saw anyone in the hall.
Five to ten minutes later, the attacker knocks on Avery’s door.
Marcus’s gaze
tracks back and forth across the timeline, expression thoughtful. “It’s not a
coincidence, the time of it, I mean.”
“No,” Heidi
agrees. “It can’t be.”
“Right, so,”
McCoy says, catching the ball, and then rolling it between his palms. “Back to
what I said: he works at the hotel.”
“We won’t
know for sure until we get the security footage.”
A phone
dings—McCoy’s—and he digs it from his pocket and smiles at the screen. “That
time is now, my man. The lab’s got the video up and ready for us.”
“Marcus, why
don’t you go, and take McCoy,” Heidi says.
Behind McCoy,
Marcus makes a subtle face of displeasure, but nods, and pushes off the desk.
“C’mon, newbie.”
McCoy bounds
up like a puppy, already talking Marcus’s ear off as they shrug into their
jackets and head for the door.
Heidi feels a
little of the tension in her belly unwind in his absence. She’s never known
what to do with cheerful people. Sets her teeth on edge and leaves her feeling
wrong-footed.
She refreshes
the coffee in her mug and drags her wheeled chair over so sit at Jillian’s
elbow.
“That was good
thinking,” Jillian says, eyes glued to the Facebook feed she’s scrolling
through at breakneck speed.
“Getting rid
of McCoy?”
“He’s like a
black hole sucking all the smart out of the room.”
Heidi wants
to laugh, but swallows it down.
Up until
McCoy’s placement on the squad, Jillian was their youngest detective, though
aside from her technical know-how and fresh, unlined face, most people would
peg her as at least a decade older. She’s thirty, petite, impressively fit, and
wears her blonde hair in a long pixie cut that works well with her dainty face.
Her first day on the team, Dan smirked and called her Tinkerbell. Jillian
smirked right back and said, “Thanks, Mr. Clean. You leave your earrings at
home?”
Dan doesn’t
shave his head anymore, though he still calls her Tink. Heidi chalks that up as
a win in Jillian’s column.
“He’s…a lot,”
Heidi concedes about McCoy, “but he’s not stupid.”
Jillian’s
hands still on the keyboard, and she does an exaggerated slow head turn Heidi’s
direction. “Oh no.”
“What?”
“Don’t tell
me you’ve gone all Mama Bear on him.”
Jillian’s
face falls the moment the words hit Heidi somewhere high in the chest. “Shit.
I’m sorry, I didn’t—”
Heidi waves
her to silence, swallows down a sharp lump of old hurt, and says, “Forget it,
you’re fine.” She nods toward the computer, though her pulse is doing
kickflips. “What’ve you got?”
Jillian takes
a breath, and turns back to the screen subdued, all business. “I started with
her X account, and that’s a whole mess, but let’s look at Facebook, first.
Avery’s personal account is set to private, and she hasn’t posted anything
there in over a year. Just a few friends, probably real-life friends and
family, not fans. Nothing sketchy jumps out, though she has more than ten-thousand
friend requests, none of them answered. But look here at her professional
page. She has two-point-three million followers. Some of the posts have a
personal touch, but most of them are promos for upcoming releases, and tour
information. Most of it reads like it was written by someone at the publishing
house, instead of Avery herself.”
“You’re
familiar with Avery’s writing style?” Heidi asks, surprised.
Jillian
shrugs. “I’ve read a few of her books. They’re not bad.” She grins, quick and
humorless. “Kinda spicy. But, here. Most of her comments are positive. ‘I love
your books,’ ‘You’re my favorite author,’ so on and so forth. Then there’s the
negative ones: ‘You suck,’ ‘What a fucking snob,’ ‘Hard pass on supporting a
misogynist.’”
“Misogynist?”
“Before she
made it big, when she was still self-publishing, Avery got a bad rep for hating
other women because she wasn’t actively promoting her fellow authors’ books.”
“And that
means she hates women?”
Jillian
reaches for her coffee cup, and shakes her head. “Before you brought the
passwords, I started digging around online, trying to get a better feel for the
book world.” She shoots Heidi a serious look over the rim of her mug. “It’s
like the high school cafeteria all over again. And a little like a prison yard.
There’s cliques – hell, there’s factions. Big name authors with girl gangs who
pimp their books and try to take down the competition. Chat rooms, and secret
chat rooms, and online smear campaigns. It gets nasty. If someone new
pops up, she has to kiss the ring of whichever Queen Bee is at the top of the
heap at the moment. If she doesn’t, followers and influencers try to coerce her
into doing it. They call it ‘women supporting other women,’ but it’s really more
like kicking a vig to a kingpin. Some of these authors spend tens of thousands
of dollars paying bloggers and TikTok starlets to hype their books, all of it
designed to look organic. It’s a snake eating its own tail, and for whatever
reason, Avery never participated in that. Keeping to herself pissed a lot of
influential people off, and now that she’s ‘made it,’ they want to take her
down even more. See, check this out.”
She clicks
into Avery’s direct messages and opens one titled Seriously?? It’s paragraphs-deep.
Jillian
starts to read aloud: “‘Miss Jamison, this is the fourth time I’ve messaged you
and you lack the courtesy to message me back, but this bears repeating. As I’ve
said before, while your writing shows real raw talent, you would benefit from
the help of a professional, knowledgeable editor, which your publisher clearly
isn’t providing. I guess all they care about is sales, rather than the quality
of the books they’re producing.’ It goes on for a good three-thousand words
like that. This person, rubyredrainbow22”—Jillian snorts—“wants Avery to
consult her and her ‘team’ about ‘making the most’ of her creativity.”
“Hell of a
way to ask for a job,” Heidi mutters.
“Right?
There’s at least twenty more messages just like this one, someone telling Avery
she could be better if she’d only listen to Random Name Cartoon Avatar about
how to be a better writer. They range in tone from ass-kissing to vicious. Then
there’s these messages.”
She opens
another, no subject line, and Heidi leans in closer to the screen to read it
for herself.
There’s no
salutation, either.
You’re
such a fake bitch. You think you’re so much better than everyone you came up
with just because one of the big five picked you up, but you’re not. You suck.
You write like Shakespeare got high on shrooms and got a head injury. You take
fifteen fucking paragraphs to describe one tiny thing, and everyone who reads
your books gets bored as shit and can’t finish them. You wouldn’t have a career
at all if you didn’t step on the Strong Women who came before you, who INVENTED
the kind of fucking shit you write. You hate other women, and it really shows.
Heidi sits
back, feeling like the message physically shoved her. “Good God.”
“Yeah. Her X
DMs and author email inbox are full of more of the same.”
“Are we
talking dozens of messages? Or…?”
“Hundreds,”
Jillian says. “And that’s just at a glance.”
“Any blatant
threats?”
“Not that
I’ve seen so far—not of the choke-you-out variety, anyway. But I think we need
to turn this over to the lab guys and let them mine through her accounts.”
“Yeah.” Heidi
sinks back in her chair and massages at her temples. The headache that first
bloomed in the car with McCoy earlier is spreading, and starting to throb. She
can feel it in her ears and behind her eyes, heartbeat-timed pressure that
compounds the figurative headache that is Avery’s online abuse.
“Maybe we’ll
get lucky with the security footage,” Jillian says. “And we can run facial
recognition.”
“Maybe so.”
The case feels swamping, suddenly. Heidi can only hope that this is a one-off,
unrelated to the reams of hate mail and insults that fill the screen.
4
Avery’s had
her share of scrapes, bumps, bruises, and even a concussion, once. She’s never
been this beat up before, but she doesn’t think the pain is purely
physical.
Each breath
sends sharp needles through her broken ribs. Each slight shift of her body in
the bed brings a new bruise to light. Her entire body aches, and her head
throbs, railroad spikes at her temples and a dull pounding across the entirety
of her skull. Her swollen eye feels so tight it might burst, a kind of pulpy,
tender pain too great for comprehension; she thinks the drugs are all that
keeps her from spiraling into a hurt-fueled panic attack. Even her feet hurt,
teeth-gritting stabs where here nails are broken and torn, where the soles
scuffed raw over concrete.
But a humming
undercurrent of fear heightens all of it. Someone did this to her. She
didn’t fall off a horse, or throw herself out of a truck unloading hay—she’s
done that before—or fall off an icy curb and land hard on the pavement. A
stranger grabbed her, struck her, injured her. Her injuries are the result of a
conscious act of violence, and knowing that, thinking of it each time she sits
forward in bed, sharpens every pain, tightens every strung-out nerve.
Talking to
the detectives tires her more than she expected; or maybe it’s the pain meds.
She swims for a while, when they’re gone. Dragged beneath a tide of
half-consciousness, in which she dreams of cruel hands and fierce blows, while
still able to hear the hushed sounds of the hospital around her. She tries to
move, and can’t; thinks sleep paralysis, and then goes deeper under for
a bit, a dark, velvet void of thoughtlessness.
She wakes
with a start when pain squeezes tight around her ribs. “Where…?” she slurs, and
reaches out for something that isn’t there. Her right arm works, her left
doesn’t respond, save to blast another jolt of pain through her wrung-out body.
“Ow. Shit.”
Urgency
greater than the pain slams into her. She attempts to sit up, and can’t be sure
how far she gets because her vision goes black and spotty. “The seminar.”
“Cancelled,”
Trish says from somewhere off to her right. “It was the first thing I did.
Well, the second. Once the doctors said you were going to be alright.”
“Cancelled,”
Avery repeats, and in her groggy, pained state is momentarily swamped with
regret. All those people who bought tickets, who made plans, who came to the
hotel, some of them from out of town…and they were met this morning with a sign
on the door and apologies from a hotel employee. She let them all down. She failed
them.
With no small
effort, she turns her head on the pillow, every microscopic movement agony, and
sees Trish sitting in a visitor chair by the bed. She’s on her phone, as ever,
but she glances up and regards Avery with something serious that might be
concern. Or sympathy. Or a blend of both. She holds eye contact when she
speaks, and Avery can’t remember the last time that happened, that Trish wasn’t
multitasking.
She says, as
gently as Avery has ever heard her, “Yes, I cancelled it. I had to.”
“But…”
Avery’s breath quickens, and that makes her ribs hurt terribly. “I don’t want
to cancel it.”
“You’re in
the hospital, Avery. You were attacked.”
“I know. But
I don’t want to let everyone down.”
Trish’s gaze
tightens, a more familiar expression, and it’s oddly comforting. “We can see
about rescheduling, if that’s what you want to do, and if we can fit it in with
the rest of the tour. But you’re out of commission for the next while. Will’s
already handling postponing your next few stops.”
Avery closes
her eyes and fights the sting of tears. So many people in so many cities are
excited to see her, and she’s failing all of them.
She hears
Trish stand. “I’m going to go make a few calls. I’ll find your doctor, first,
and have him get you more pain meds. They said they’d keep you twelve hours,
and we’re coming up on that at five. Maybe we can get out of here.”
And go
where? Avery wonders, but
doesn’t say.
Trish leaves
without further assurances, heels clipping on the tile, and that’s familiar,
too. Also comforting in a Trish sort of way.
Avery takes a
few minutes to fight down the competing waves of pain and get a handle on her
emotions. Anyone would cry in this situation, she imagines her mother
saying. But Mom didn’t cry, not routinely, and crying now makes Avery feel even
weaker and out of control.
Slowly, the
sharp spikes of pain return to dull throbbing, and the burning in her eyes
recedes. When she opens them next, it’s just in time to see the door whisper
open.
A nurse
enters, bearing a pale blue ceramic vase bursting with flowers.
Avery blinks
some more, and she sees yellow, and she sees red. And she sees roses. A garish
spray of yellow and red roses, padded with baby’s breath.
Her body goes
cold. Her heart slams against her broken ribs. She wants to speak, to shout. Take
those away! No! But her tongue shrivels.
“Oh, you’re
awake,” the nurse says, smiling, chipper. She totes the flowers over to the
rolling nightstand and sets them up beside Avery’s plugged-in phone and water
cup. “Aren’t these pretty? There’s a card.” She plucks it from its plastic
holder and offers it over. Avery doesn’t want to take it, but she does anyway,
politeness too deeply ingrained. Her hand trembles, and crumples the paper.
“How’s your
pain, sweetie?” the nurse asks, oblivious to her sudden bout of terror. “It’s
time for more meds, I think.”
“I…” Avery
starts, and that’s as far as she can go.
Trish steps
into the open doorway. “Good, you’re here. She needs more meds. I can’t run
down Dr. Lessing, so if you could—” She breaks off when she sees the flowers.
Her eyes go wide. “Oh, fuck.”
The nurse
looks between them, flabbergasted. “What?”
Trish whips
her phone from one jacket pocket, and a white business card from the other.
Taps her foot after she dials, phone pressed to her ear. “Hello, Detective
Cooper? You need to send someone back to the hospital. Immediately.
Forget attacked: Avery’s being stalked.”
5
Dan shows up
while Heidi’s neck-deep in Avery’s emails, good and bad.
While they
wait for the guys to get back with the video results, she and Jillian are
splitting up the computer side of things. Jillian tackles Facebook and X, and
Heidi pores through Gmail.
Heidi doesn’t
enjoy reading her own emails, though she does so diligently; it’s one of those
normal, everyday touchstones that keeps her grounded. “Locks you in the
present,” the department shrink told her, during her mandatory six weeks of
therapy. She scoffed originally, but she gets it, now. Be it coupons or, more
interestingly, case correspondence with Flores or someone else at the D.A.’s
office.
Avery’s
email, though, is downright depressing.
There’s lots
of fan mail. Complimentary, sometimes gushing, usually encouraging. There’s
requests to participate in novelty book boxes and crates, whatever those are,
and group signings; those are flagged as forwarded, sent along to Trish or the
agent, Will.
Then there’s
the hate mail. There’s…a lot of it. More than should be possible. Heidi reads
the first dozen all the way through, but after that, finds her eyes glazing
over. The words—hateful, uncreative, bludgeoning—begin to weigh on her
physically, until she realizes she’s scrunching down in her chair.
She’s up
refreshing her coffee when Dan strides into the bullpen, tie askew, hair still
damp, massive to-go coffee clutched in one hand.
“I know, I
know, I know,” he says, and dumps his jacket on top of his desk.
Heidi shares
a glance with Jillian.
“Rough morning?”
Jillian asks, and sounds innocent. Key word: sounds.
Dan sends her
an unimpressed glance and then takes a deep swig of his coffee, throat working
like a man parched.
At one point,
Dan Miller was considered the best and brightest young detective in their
squad. Those were the early days, when Heidi and Dan first made detective, the
young guns in a group of old timers nearing retirement. They were bright and
shiny, and Dan especially possessed a hunting dog ferocity, a sharpness that
pushed him harder, longer, and more successfully than anyone else. Heidi
struggled to keep up with him some days, but never felt more confident about a
case than when they were partnered together.
But Dan’s
wife left him two years ago, and he’s been unraveling slowly ever since. It
started with a hot temper that simmered down into a general malaise. A dulling
of his once-keen edges. He still performs his duties to the letter, but without
the old flair. He and his ex, Sharon, have joint custody of the kids, who are
teens, and rather insufferable, Heidi thinks, with love. Dan’s late at least
once a week, and it’s not uncommon for there to be something amiss with his
wardrobe: a missing button, a wrongly creased shirt collar; it today’s case, a
crooked tie.
He still looks
good, though. Now that his head-shaving kick is at an end—honestly, thank you,
Jillian—his hair’s thick, and dark, and a little too long on top in a charming
way, heavily gelled when he isn’t fresh from a gym shower, like today. A former
high school and college running back, he’s always been fit, but it’s clear
weight-lifting is an outlet for all his post-divorce frustration.
He thunks his
coffee down on the desk with a motion that clearly tells Jillian not to push
him. “What are we working on?”
Heidi says,
“Avery Jamison.”
His brows
lift. “The author?”
“Okay, does
everyone know who this woman is except me?”
“Probably.
What did she do? All writers are kinda fucked up. Not shocking this one
snapped.”
“This one
is our victim,” Heidi says, frowning. “Someone dragged her out of her hotel
room last night and assaulted her in the stairwell.”
“Shit.”
Heidi’s cell
rings, and she pulls it out. “Yeah.”
“The attacker
delivered a line from her book to her,” Jillian’s saying. “Marcus and McCoy are
looking at the hotel security footage, and we’re—”
Heidi tunes
them out. “This is Detective Cooper.”
The caller
doesn’t identify herself, but Heidi recognizes Trish the Publicist’s voice
straight off. “Detective, we have a problem.”
~*~
A different
pair of detectives arrive about a half-hour after the flowers do.
Avery’s on
her feet. She waved off the pain meds the bewildered nurse brought her in a
paper cup, and insisted on getting out of bed. It was a laborious and terribly
painful process, but once she’s upright, the pain is mostly in her ribs, and
her head, the throbbing of which is making the room sway around her. Meg went
down to the gift shop earlier, so she has slippers and plush robe, belted as
tightly as she can bear it over her gown in a bed at something like decorum.
Like hell is she going to be tucked under the covers the second time she talks
to the police.
“At least sit
down,” Trish grouses.
“No, I’m
fine.” Avery shifts her weight from foot to foot, the memory foam distributing
the discomfort from her scraped soles, and peers through the window at the
parking lot below. She has a view of the hospital’s circular drive, the
drop-off portico, people coming and going, both on foot and being pushed along
in wheelchairs. Any one of them could be the stalker who brought the roses,
along with a note whose text continues to cycle through her battered head, over
and over:
Roses are
red,
Roses are
yellow,
Bet your
dumbass thinks
You’ve got
a good fellow.
As far as
vengeful other-woman messages go, it’s stupid. Avery wrote it herself, and she
can admit that. To her credit, the fictional other woman who sends it to a
cheated-on wife in her novel Take a Bow is more of a psycho than a poet.
Still. Not Avery’s most imaginative work.
Also not
appropriate in this situation, given she’s single and certainly not being
cheated on.
It’s an effective
message, though. I’ve read your books, it says. I know your words.
This isn’t random, it’s about you specifically.
Down in the
parking lot, a man in work coveralls with a stepladder hooked over one shoulder
heads around the corner of the building. A ballcap hides his face, but she can
see a scruff of dark stubble, dark hair peeking through the hole in the back of
his hat. Is it him? Posing as a maintenance man to deliver a flower warning?
What about
that nurse in scrubs helping an elderly woman into a wheelchair beside her van?
He has a regrettable swooping haircut, and a wide smile, but maybe he wants
Avery to be up here shaking in her fluffy shoes.
She’s being
paranoid. A vivid imagination is both a writer’s greatest asset, and fatal
flaw. It’s far too easy to spin out the possibilities into nightmare-inducing
scenarios that make her want to hop on the next flight back to Nebraska and
never write another word.
A sharp rap
sounds on the open doorframe, and Avery hates how long it takes her to turn
around, an awkward shuffle that still sets her off balance. She reaches with
her good hand for the plastic footboard of the bed to steady herself.
The man and
woman who enter are clearly cops, but not Detectives Cooper and McCoy from
earlier. The woman is petite, short-haired, and under an open puffer coat her
clothes shift over a lean, athletic physique. The man is tall, dark-haired,
handsome in a strong-jawed way, and built like a bodybuilder, buttons of his
dress shirt straining to contain his pecs.
He's the one
who reacts when Trish pulls up short on her way to the door and says, “Where’s
Detective Cooper?”
“Working on a
different aspect of the investigation. This case is getting as complicated as
one of Miss Jamison’s books.” His gaze flicks Avery’s way, mouth tugging wryly
to the side. “No offense. My daughter’s a big fan.”
The blonde
goggles up at him. “You let Piper read her books?”
“Yeah, so?
She’s fifteen.”
“Yeah, but
there’s a lot of por…” She bites her lip and darts a glance Avery’s way. Offers
a small, tight smile. “Sorry.”
The man
clears his throat, nudges the woman with his elbow, and shifts a more serious
gaze between Trish and Avery. “I’m Detective Miller, and this is Detective
Scott. We’ll be handling things here at the hospital for now.”
Trish folds
her arms tightly. “Professionally?”
Miller cocks
a single brow. “Of course. I’m guessing you’re Trish. Why don’t you step out in
the hall with me while my partner takes Avery’s statement?”
~*~
“We got a hit
on facial recognition on the guy in the stairwell,” McCoy announces with
satisfaction when he and Marcus return to the bullpen. He goes up to the board
and pins a mugshot in place with two magnets. “Dale Matthis. He did two years
starting in 2015 for DV, and had a DUI last year, lost his license.”
The mug shot
shows a large, broad-browed guy with a scruffy beard and deep-set, lifeless
eyes. A hint of a neck tattoo suggests a dragon, or a lizard, or a snake.
“Do we have
footage of him entering or exiting the hotel?” Heidi asks. “I’m assuming he’s
not an employee.”
McCoy turns
around, hands on his hips, expression smugly pleased.
Marcus makes
a long-suffering noise and resumes his earlier perch on the front of his desk.
“He is, actually. He’s a janitor on the main floor. Spa, atrium, lobby. I
called the hotel manager and he says Matthis has been there about six months.”
McCoy says,
“The cameras caught him in the stairwell ten minutes before Avery arrived at
her room, lingering between the fourth and fifth floor.”
“So he was
waiting for her,” Heidi says.
“Yeah, and
the lobby cameras caught him messing around on one of the front desk computers
the day before,” Marcus says.
“So he looked
up Avery’s room number,” Heidi says. Her headache recedes in the face of fresh
facts, mind starting to fan things out in snapshots. “Which meant he knew she
was staying at the Fitzroy. The question is: how? Nashville is a tourist
town, and there’s plenty of hotels to choose from.”
“If he works
there, he could have overheard someone mention her,” Marcus says.
“Nah, it’s
‘cause of the seminar,” McCoy says, confidently. “We know this guy’s stalking
her, right? Between the book quotes, and the flowers, this is someone who pays
attention to her.”
He does make
a point. Heidi nods.
“The
seminar’s been all over her social media for months,” McCoy continues. “When,
where, what time. He knew when her signing was, knew when it would be over, and
he correctly assumed she would be staying in the same hotel where the seminar
was being held.”
Marcus points
to the board, to the mugshot. “Matthis doesn’t strike me as being that clever.”
“He doesn’t
have to be,” Heidi says. “With the way stuff gets advertised, a stalker can be
spoon-fed everything he needs to know to get to his victim.”
It’s a
sobering thought, a frightening one, and they all trade looks.
“Okay, so.”
She stands. “Do we have an address for Matthis?”
“Yeah,” both
of them say together.
“Cool. Let’s
go pick him up.”
~*~
“Jillian,”
Detective Scott says, once they’re seated: Avery on the edge of the bed, teeth
gritted against the stabbing in her ribs, and Scott—Jillian—in Trish’s visitor
chair. “I figure your week’s off to a shitty enough start, no need for
formality.” Her smile is a little wry, a little smirky, and reminds Avery very
much of the rodeo girls she grew up around. There’s a toughness there,
beneath Jillian’s surface, efficient, sure movements that speak of physical
confidence, and competence.
Avery finds
herself smiling back, despite the tugging of the stitches in her lip. “Yeah,
pretty much.”
“The
flowers.” Jillian gestures to them over her shoulder with her notetaking pen.
“That’s like the red and yellow roses and the note from Take a Bow,
right?”
“Yes. You’ve
read the book?”
“Yeah. The
mob boss’s wife starts getting threatened by a woman who claims to be his
mistress, but she’s actually just stalking him?”
“That’s the
one.”
“But you’re
not married, right?”
“Right.”
Avery massages at the back of her neck with her good and, and not only does it
not alleviate the tension there, it also sends fresh crackles of pain along her
skull. “My situation is nothing like that, so it’s not a one-to-one matchup.”
“Just someone
trying to make sure you know he’s read your books,” Jillian says, jotting
something down on her pad. “Do you have the note?”
“It’s there
on the table.”
Jillian pulls
a clear plastic envelope and a disposable glove from her jacket pocket and
takes care of the card. “We’ll print it to make sure it’s a match to the guy we
caught on camera in the hotel.”
Avery’s
stomach rolls, half-hope, half-dread. “You found him?”
“Officially?
We’re dispatching detectives to speak with a person of interest. Unofficially?”
She lowers her voice. “We caught his ass in 4K hitting you in the stairwell.”
“Oh. That’s
good.” A shudder moves through her, and she’s helpless to do anything but let
it pass, and the pain it caused along with it.
Jillian sets
her notepad aside and produces a tablet next. She scrolls a moment, then says,
“I’m going to show you some photos. Tell me if you recognize your assailant.”
She spins the
tablet and the screen displays six small headshots.
Avery spots
the man who put her in the hospital straight away. “That’s him.” She points
with her good hand, finger trembling wildly.
Jillian pulls
the tablet back. “Him? You’re sure?”
“Definitely.
I recognize his eyebrows, and the shape of his nostrils.”
Jillian’s
smile is small, but deeply pleased. “Awesome.” The tablet goes back in her
coat, and she fires off a quick text. “Okay, let’s talk next steps,” she says,
when she’s done, hands in her lap and gaze back on Avery’s face. “Dan and I are
gonna talk to the staff here, pull security video, and we’ll figure out who
delivered the flowers, and who signed for them. And who ordered them.
We’ll dust the card for prints, but it’s most likely someone at the florist
typed it up, and our man never touched it.”
Avery starts
to nod, then thinks better of it. “Okay.”
“Sit tight
for right now. I know you want to get out of here, but we’re going to station a
couple of officers at the door to make sure you’re safe. Once we have a suspect
in custody, we’ll need you to come down to the station for an official ID.”
“Okay.”
Jillian
stands. “You good for the time being?”
Again,
Avery’s struck by Jillian’s no-frills demeanor. The comforting familiarity of
it. “Yeah.”
Jillian hands
her a business card. “Call if you need anything, or think of something useful.
I’ll be back.”
~*~
Dale
Matthis’s license is currently revoked thanks to his DUI, but the address
listed in the computer takes them just off the strip, down a seedy little side
street packed tight with rundown duplexes and crumbling old Victorians that
have been converted into three-unit apartment buildings. It’s a street Heidi
knows well after fifteen years on the job, one that evidence leads them down
too often.
As the
unmarked, piloted by Marcus, cruises past chain link-fenced yards, a woman in a
housecoat tucks quickly inside a front door and slams it shut. A pitbull runs
to the end of its chain, barking at them, foam flying off its tongue. A few
curtains twitch in upper windows.
They aren’t a
welcome sight for the people who live here.
“This is it.”
Heidi gestures to a cockeyed mailbox ahead, and Marcus turns up into the
driveway of a blue duplex unit in bad need of repainting. The porch is
concrete, and bisected down the middle by an iron railing, separating the two
different owners. The far side is tidy, and hosts a bench, and a little potted
tree. The near side, the side whose door they’re about to knock on, is
cluttered with brightly-colored kids’ toys and a upholstered chair with an
overflowing laundry basket balanced on its seat.
They sit for
a minute, once Marcus kills the engine, scanning the house, searching for signs
of movement. There are none.
McCoy sits
forward between the front seats to peer through the windshield. “You think
nobody’s home? If I were him, and I’d been caught on camera in two places, I
wouldn’t go home either.”
“Then we’ll
do what?” Heidi asks, half-turning, using her Pop Quiz voice.
Marcus looks
like he’s trying not to smile.
McCoy looks
like he’s trying not to roll his eyes. He answers respectfully: “We’ll canvas
the neighborhood.”
“Right.”
“You two take
the door and I’ll go around back?” Marcus asks.
Heidi pops
her door. “Yeah.”
She waits for
McCoy to get out and catch up to her, then pushes through the gate that lets
onto the front sidewalk. It squeaks loudly enough that she winces.
“Who’s listed
as the homeowner?” she asks. The walk is full of weed-choked cracks, and she
has to take a long stride to avoid one.
To his
credit, McCoy doesn’t have to check his phone. “April Cleveland. She’s been the
listed homeowner for two years. I’m thinking girlfriend.”
“Or
landlord,” Heidi says, and starts up the steps.
“Yeah.”
His tone is
breezy, unconvinced, so she pauses on the top step, and turns to him. Before
she can deliver yet another caution—she’s tired of them at this point,
doubtless he hates them—he lifts two fingers in another Boy Scout salute.
“Right,”
Heidi says, and goes to ring the bell.
It bing-bongs
deeper within the house, but though she tries to peek through the gap in the
sidelight curtains, she can’t see anything of the interior.
McCoy goes to
the wide front window, leans in, and cups his hands around his eyes. There’s a
broken slat in the blinds, and that’s where he presses his nose, but he pulls
back after a moment, shaking his head. “I see a couch, and a TV, but that’s
about it.”
Heidi presses
the bell again.
The door to
the neighboring unit opens, and a woman with a tight gray bun and a matching
sweater set steps out onto the porch. She carries a small watering can in one
hand, and props the other on her hip. “Y’all looking for April?”
Heidi clocks
the badly veiled contempt in the woman’s gaze, the wrinkling of her nose as her
gaze flits from them to the messy porch, and then back. “We’re looking for Dale
Matthis, actually. Does he live here?”
The
contemptuous expression deepens, pressing deep grooves around the woman’s
mouth. “Dale? That piece of…” She catches herself. “Trash? What would
you want with him?” Her gaze drops to Heidi’s belt, where she wears her shield
in front of her gun. “Oh. You’re cops. That seems about right?”
McCoy steps
up beside her, and after his good showing with Trish at the hospital this
morning, Heidi doesn’t try to check him. “Ma’am, it’s really important that we
talk to him. Does he live here?”
The woman
nods. “Most of the time. April isn’t smart enough to dump his ass. Poor girl.”
She turns away from them and begins watering the potted tree. “I keep telling
her she’s gonna get arrested with him one day, but she thinks she can save him.
She’s one of those girls.”
“Have you
seen either of them today?” Heidi asks.
“April had to
take one of the kids to the doctor. Dale works at that new hotel. The fancy one
with the indoor forest.”
“Yeah, we’ve
already tried there, and he didn’t show up today.”
She snorts.
“Then he’ll be at Rosa’s, trying to get another DUI.”
~*~
Dr. Lessing
checks her reflexes and vitals one more time, proclaims the immediate danger of
her concussion to be over, prescribes her some painkillers and signs her
release paperwork. She’s free to go.
But go where?
One step at a
time, Avery decides. The first, most arduous of which is donning the clothes
Meg brought her from the hotel. It’s joggers, a t-shirt and hoodie, all loose
and soft, but it still takes her fifteen minutes to get dressed. She bites her
tongue against the pain, and tastes blood.
She leans
against the bed for a few minutes, until the sharpest wave passes, then
straightens carefully and stuffs her feet back in her giftshop slippers. Like
hell is she fumbling with shoestrings in her current state.
A knock
sounds at the door—she’s tired of door knocks; tired of the way her stomach
clenches with dread every time—and Meg pokes her head in, expression a blend of
concerned and apologetic.
“Sorry. You
okay?”
“Fine.” She
feels certain her smile falls short.
“Sorry,” Meg
says again, “but the detectives are back.”
“That’s fine.
Send them in.”
Meg pushes
the door wide, then hurries in and to the side, head ducked. She goes to
collect Avery’s bag, and Avery’s too tired and sore to insist on carrying it
herself, the way she usually does.
The
detectives follow, Jillian leading. “Good news, bad news,” she says, without
preamble.
“Jills,”
Detective Miller sighs.
“Avery grew
up on a farm,” Jillian says. “She doesn’t want a bunch of bullshit, do you?”
The last she directs Avery’s way, brows lifted expectantly.
“I’m allergic
to it, actually,” Avery says, and gets a grin out of both detectives.
“The good
news,” Detective Miller says, leaning a hip up against the room’s small
countertop, “is that we have the flower delivery on film.”
“The bad
news,” Jillian said, “is it came from Flowers 2 Go. We got the van, and the
driver in his little uniform coming in the lobby doors. A nurse signed for it.”
She shrugs and stuffs her hands in her jacket pockets. “We’re headed to the
flower shop, next, but the employee is definitely not the man from the hotel.”
Avery doesn’t
know if that’s an added worry or not. If her attacker hasn’t been caught yet,
he could have easily turned around and ordered flowers.
She asks,
“Could he have an accomplice?”
“We’re going
to find out,” Miller says, with a firmness that says don’t you worry, we’ll
catch the bastard.
“Meg was just
telling us you’ve been released,” Jillian says.
“I have.” Her
heart lurches; as badly as she wants to leave the hospital, the idea of setting
foot back out into the world where a man wants to hurt her, maybe even wants to
kill her, sets her to shaking.
Detective
Miller steps forward, hand extended in a gesture that brings to mind gentling a
spooky horse. In a low, soothing voice, he says, “We’re going to take you back
to the hotel, and get you inside.”
“In a
different room,” Jillian puts in.
“We’ll leave
uniforms stationed in the hall, and the hotel staff’s been put on high alert.
This guy isn’t going to get to you again.” He pauses a beat, holds eye contact.
His eyes are dark, like warm coffee, and very serious. “I promise.”
Avery
swallows, dry throat sticking. “Okay.”
What else is
there to say?
Another good story! I got a bit confused in ch 5 as to who was with Det cooper until I realized we don’t know Marcus’ full name yet.
ReplyDeleteExcited to read the rest of it! Really like the character and plot setup so far!
ReplyDeleteMore, more, more! This is definitely a preorder for me!!
ReplyDeleteI hope you either contact to post chapters of this book or publish it, because I am already invested in it. I can't wait to read more
ReplyDeleteI am hooked! Glad u are going to keep going. I want to finish!
ReplyDelete