3
Twenty-four hours later Logan embraced Ellie in the airport arrivals area until she started to squirm. He released her and hugged Sam Cahill briefly.
‘Everything okay?’ Sam asked, squinting at Logan. ‘I mean, you look a little pale.’
‘I’m fine. Jet lag.’
She didn’t look convinced. ‘And Alex?’
‘Said he’d be back in a couple of days.’
‘I know that, Logan. I meant, how is he?’
‘He’s, you know. He’s just Alex.’
Sam did some more squinting before turning and leading them towards the escalator up to the car park. Logan put an arm around Ellie and squeezed.
‘How was your holiday?’ he asked.
‘It was good.’
She sounded less than enthusiastic.
He stopped and turned her to face him.
‘What’s wrong?’
She blinked and he saw tears shining in her eyes. Sam Cahill watched from a distance.
‘Ellie?’ he said. ‘Tell me.’
‘It was fun, you know,’ she told him.
‘But?’
‘I didn’t know when you’d be back.’
‘You knew I was coming back though, right?’
She looked uncertain.
‘I’m not going anywhere any time soon,’ he said.
She smiled and hugged him as tight as she ever had. Sam Cahill smiled and turned her head away, bringing a hand up to her face. Logan hugged Ellie back.
In the car Sam explained that they were having dinner at her house and she wouldn’t entertain any debate on the subject. Logan was hungry after the long flight and didn’t argue.
It only occurred to Logan that the Cahill girls had not been with Sam at the airport and that someone must have been looking after them when he followed Sam into the living room of her house. Irvine stood up from the couch and beamed at him. He went forward and hugged her without hesitation. He pulled away from the embrace and looked at the ugly bruising still on her face.
‘Glad to be back?’ she asked.
It was Logan’s turn to beam. ‘Like you wouldn’t believe.’
She put her hands on his cheeks and kissed his mouth.
‘Get a room,’ Ellie said.
4
The house was a modest two-storey affair with a small front yard and a late model Toyota in the driveway. Cahill didn’t know Kansas City, but it looked like a good neighbourhood. He stood at the foot of the path leading to the front door and patted the rear pocket of his jeans, feeling the slim presence of the gift he had brought here.
The doorbell chimed inside when he pressed the button by the side of the door. After a few seconds a woman not much younger than his own wife answered the door. She put a hand up to her face to shield her eyes from the glare of the low sun.
She looked better than he had expected, though her face still bore the tell-tale signs of grief. Her hair was blond and cut short, shaped to her face. Her eyes were the palest blue he had ever seen.
‘Melanie,’ he said. ‘I’m Alex Cahill.’
Her hand dropped to her side. Cahill had no real expectation of how she would react to his presence. Her expression was neutral but she stepped back and told him to come in.
He waited on a couch in the living room while Melanie Stark made coffee in the nearby kitchen. She handed him a mug and sat in a chair by the window, watching him drink.
He felt self-conscious because she did not have a drink so he took two quick sips and set the mug down on the floor at his feet.
‘You must have seen the news reports?’ he said.
She nodded. ‘They didn’t mention Tim,’ she replied.
‘I know. But they will.’
This time her face was more animated.
‘What do you mean?’
‘I spoke with the FBI chief in Denver. He’s going to make sure that Tim’s part in all of this is put front and centre.’
‘I’m not sure what you mean, Alex.’
‘I mean that he was a hero. He set in motion a chain reaction that broke an international drugs ring. He saved who knows how many lives.’
She stood and looked out of the window.
‘You mean his death set that in motion?’
‘I suppose that’s right, yes. I’m sorry.’
She sniffed with her back turned to him.
‘But that’s the job. We put ourselves in harm’s way every day. That’s what we signed up for. Tim knew it.’
‘Doesn’t make it any easier.’
Cahill reached into his pocket and took out the wallet. He ran his hand over the smooth surface.
Melanie Stark looked round at him, watching him turn the wallet over in his hands.
‘What’s that?’ she asked.
‘It’s why I came here.’
Cahill got up and walked to her, placing the wallet in her hand. Her skin felt dry and rough. He saw up close that she had no make-up on and had probably given up on looking after herself since Tim’s death. He hoped what he had given her would speed the healing process. It was all he could do.
She looked at the wallet, the skin between her eyes creasing into a frown.
‘Open it,’ he said.
She put her fingers at the edge of the wallet and pulled it open.
A hand fluttered to her mouth. Cahill wondered if she might faint, but she held it together.
On one flap of the wallet, her husband’s photograph was set in an official FBI identification card behind a clear, plastic sleeve.
On the other flap was the gold shield of a special agent.
A single tear splashed on the plastic sleeve holding the photograph.
‘Tim …’ She crumpled. Fell into his arms and sobbed.
Cahill held her up, feeling her tears soak his chest.
Her sob turned into something more. All the raw emotion of the last week pouring out as the dam burst.
And all the time she held the wallet tight, her fingers splayed against the image of her husband’s face.
When the tide subsided, he heard her say something, but it was muffled as her face was still pressed into his chest.
He asked her what it was.
‘Thank you,’ she said.
I did it for you, Tim, he thought. You were one of the best.