The walk to her parking spot was a half block but her nerves snapped as she passed parked cars able to mask an attacker. Her heart raced as she neared a familiar alley, glanced down and searched for a hooded attacker. Seeing no one, she hurried to her car. A click of the button, the doors unlocked and she slid behind the wheel, breathless. For a moment she let the warmth of the seat seep into her bruised shoulder. Getting around wasn’t as easy as she’d imagined.
She started the car and pulled onto the side street. Less than thirty minutes later, she arrived at the rustic address that Lexis had loved so much. She stopped one hundred yards from the cabin studying the crime-scene tape and the police car positioned by the forensics van.
She studied the cop car, knowing he’d be the gatekeeper she’d have to get past if she wanted a look at the crime scene. When she realized he wasn’t in the patrol car, she grabbed her purse and hurried the last one hundred yards. Her shoulder throbbed and begged her to stop but she kept moving, hesitating at the yellow crime-scene tape. Everyone entering the crime scene changed it in some way, whether they picked up critical fibers, tracked foreign dirt or smudged a fingerprint.
Rachel wanted to go into the house and stand where her friend had lived. She wanted to tell Lexis that she was sorry. How had all this spiraled so badly out of control?
As much as she wanted to do all this, she didn’t cross the line. Her grief did not trump the cops’ job of catching this killer.
“Tell me you aren’t thinking about entering my crime scene.”
Rachel turned to see a petite woman dressed in a blue Nashville PD jumpsuit. Behind her stood the uniformed officer. He was tall, lean, and annoyed.
“Who are you?” the officer asked.
Rachel’s attention went to the woman. She wore heavy boots and had wound long strawberry blond hair into a bun at the nape of her neck. She wasn’t tall, in fact delicate described her better but her gaze possessed a fierceness that told anyone with half a brain that she didn’t mess around. Her name tag read, Officer Morgan.
Morgan. This woman might not look like Deke Morgan but she shared his demeanor. And with the way Rachel’s luck had been going, they were kin.
Rachel stepped back from the tape. “I wasn’t going to mess with the crime scene.”
“What are you doing here?” Officer Morgan approached, her booted feet thudding into the dirt.
She tightened her fingers around her purse strap. “I was a friend of Lexis Hanover’s.”
A delicate brow arched. “I know you.”
Rachel stifled a grimace, knowing her name would now end up in some report that would land on Deke Morgan’s desk. Crap. “I’m Rachel Wainwright.”
Officer Morgan tilted her head as if her interest-meter spiked. “You look different without your business suit.”
Another TV fan. “And I covered the bruise on my cheek with makeup. I will forever be known as the woman decked on the eleven o’clock news.”
A smile twisted the edges of her lips. She turned to the officer. “I got this.”
He hesitated and then returned to his vehicle.
“There’re worse legacies.” Officer Morgan held her sketchpad close. “So you’re trying to get Jeb Jones freed?”
“I’m trying to get the DNA testing back. That will tell me whether I should keep listening to him or walk away.”
“Do you think he did it?”
“It’s not for me to judge.”
Eyes as brittle as glass studied her. “But you have an opinion. I’ve never met an attorney that didn’t have an opinion.”
“I have thoughts.”
“Which are?”
Rachel could verbally fence with the best and she was up against the best. Time to thrust and parry. “You must be related to Deke Morgan.”
That tipped her off guard. “Why would you say that?”
“You have his way of asking questions. Not satisfied until you get the answer you really want.”
Blue eyes narrowed. “Maybe that’s a cop thing.”
“The name tag aside, I’d say it’s also a Morgan thing. Family gatherings must be interesting.”
“I never said we were related.”
Rachel shook her head slowly. “You could be a cousin, but my vote goes to sister. Kid sister.”
Tight-lipped but curious, she shrugged. “Bingo. I’m the kid sister.”
Rachel inventoried the milky skin and the splash of freckles partly hidden by powder. “You don’t look much like him. But you act and sound just like him.”
“Guilty as charged. I’ve been hearing that since I was five.”
“Is police business the family business?”
“I joined eight years ago after I graduated from college. I loved forensics so it was a natural. Another brother is retired police. Another is with TBI.”
“A police family dynasty.”
Weight shifted from foot to foot as she readied a battle stance. “A dynasty founded on the conviction you are trying to overturn.”
“I’m looking for the truth, Officer Morgan. If Jeb is guilty then the matter is closed. Have you considered that he might be innocent?”
“He’s not.”
She clung to her position. “If he is innocent, then the real killer got away with killing Annie Rivers Dawson.”
“I don’t believe the killer did get away. My father arrested the right man.”
And so they’d reached the impasse that would not be crossed until the final test results. “Look, I didn’t come here to fight. I came to see . . . to see the home Lexis loved. I’ll let you get back to your work.”
As Rachel turned, she saw the tented yellow numbers that indicated evidence. Deke had said Lexis had been drawn outside and attacked. An anguished breath shuddered through her and her own shoulder throbbed, a reminder she’d forgotten to take her aspirin. Her fingers massaged her shoulder.
From behind her Officer Morgan said, “You were attacked last night.”
The tented yellow numbers wound around the house like Oz’s yellow brick road. Would they lead the police to the killer? “Yes.”
“Did you find evidence to help catch this guy?”
“I wish I had.” Rachel faced Officer Morgan, surprised to find concern had wiped away the anger. “I wish that I’d been able to ID him. If I had, Lexis might still be alive. But I didn’t see him. If I can help with this case, Officer Morgan, please let me know.”
“Sure.”
Rachel turned from the crime scene and the officer’s questioning gaze. She walked seven feet before the tears welled.
Rebecca Saunders loved sin.
Perhaps because she’d been raised to believe that all forms of pleasure were evil. Liquor, loud music, short skirts . . . they were all one-way tickets to hell, according to her daddy and momma.
By age twelve she’d learned to hide her devils behind an angel’s guise to avoid the beatings. She’d learned to keep her skirts long, her diet modest, and her music classical. But the devils never left her and as she grew older they coaxed her truest self to life.