The Widow (Boston Police/FBI #1)

“No, I suppose it wouldn’t be for you.” Her smile faded, offering a glimpse of the emotions she kept so tightly under wrap. “Everything’s a mess right now.”


“Her appointment,” Linc said, as if Owen couldn’t guess that was what she meant. “It’s all-important, you know.”

His sister swung around at him. “That’s not fair!”

He flushed. “I guess not. I’m sorry.” He shrugged, self-deprecating all of a sudden. “Being a jerk helps me not think about everything else.”

Grace nodded, instantly accepting her brother’s explanation. “It’s okay. Forget it. Owen—we’ll run along. Please let us know if there’s anything we can do. I hope Abigail’s all right.”

As she and Linc headed off the deck and back to her car, DoyleAlden pulled into the driveway, Abigail in the front seat next to him. When they got out, they greeted the Coopers, who mumbled quick hellos before continuing on their way.

“Two of Lou’s guys are up at Ellis’s house,” Doyle said as he stepped up onto the deck. “They’ll be talking to Grace and Linc next. It’s Mattie’s day off. No reason for them to know where he is, I suppose.”

Abigail walked up to the deck, her limp less noticeable. She’d put on fresh clothes, but blood had seeped through her khaki pants where she’d been cut with the drywall saw. Not a lot, Owen noted, but enough. She paid no attention, taking in a deep breath. “We could hit eighty degrees today. Imagine that.”

Doyle frowned at her. “You look like shit, Abigail.”

“One of those days, Chief.”

“Yeah.” He sighed heavily. “I guess it is.”

“At least we found my car keys. Mattie threw them in the grass by the driveway. He must have thought better of stealing my car.”

“We don’t know it was Mattie.”

“You don’t. If I were in an official capacity, I wouldn’t, either. But I’m not.” With a slight wince of pain, she moved to the glass door. “I’m the one who forgot to lock her damn door.”

“Might not have made a difference,” Doyle said. “Easy enough to put a chair or a rock through a door or window, if someone’s determined to get in.”

They’d evidently been over that ground already. Doyle obviously relished being able to reassure Abigail about a mistake she’d made.

“Anything new on Mattie?” Owen asked.

Doyle shook his head. “He knows every inch of this island. He’s got friends who’d give him a ride, pick him up in their boat—loan him a boat. If he doesn’t want to talk to us, he can make himself very hard to find.”

“Cutting my phone line was a smart preemptive strike,” Abigail said, not going inside just yet. “It delayed getting you all out here. He knew he only had a bike.”

“That’s what doesn’t make sense to me,” Doyle said. “How did he know you weren’t home? Did he happen up your driveway, see your car gone and seize the moment? I don’t know. None of it makes any damn sense. Maybe he just walked in to wait for you and decided he couldn’t explain himself—”

“So he grabbed a saw and knocked me on my ass?”

Doyle rubbed the back of his neck, the sunlight and heat—the frustration—turning his face red. “I’m just saying we don’t know until we talk to him.”

Abigail looked at Owen and gave a small smile. “The state guys confiscated my drywall saw as evidence.”

“Take a trip to the hardware store,” Doyle said. “Buy a new one. It’ll give you something to do.”

“Don’t want my help searching Mattie’s house? You’ve got enough for a search warrant—”

“Thank you for your advice, Detective Browning,” Doyle said with open sarcasm.

She was unaffected. “I should have found a stick or something to use as a cane before you all got here. Garnered some sympathy.”

“We’re all just glad you weren’t hurt worse.”

“Yeah, tough one, that’d be,” Abigail said. “Chris’s widow, John March’s daughter—”

“Just stop.” Doyle stuck a finger up at her. “Stop right now before you go too far. I try to be decent, and you—” He abandoned that thought and dropped his hand. “You try my patience, Abigail. You always have.”

She grinned at him, unrepentant. “Sorry.”

“I need to go pick up the boys. You want me to have a cruiser posted at your house?”

“Doyle—”

“Payback,” he said, with almost a chuckle. “I’ll let you know if we find Mattie.”

“I know you two go way back,” Abigail said. “I meant what I said to Lou and his guys earlier. I don’t believe Mattie attacked me with the intention of hurting me. He just wanted to get out of there without getting caught.”

“But he did attack you,” Doyle said. “Someone did, anyway. Hell, your leg’s still bleeding. You should have it looked at.”

“It’s nothing. I just overdid it. I’ll borrow Owen’s first-aid kit and put on a Band-Aid. Owen? Is that okay?”

He smiled at her. “Of course. I’ll be right here if you need me.”