By Request Collection April-June 2016. Оливия Гейтс
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“And when I saw the petals,” Piper said, “my first reaction was to rush out and give chase. But you’d locked the doors and keyed in the code. That slowed me down enough to think.”
Thank God, Duncan thought. If he hadn’t slowed her down. He reined his thoughts in.
“If Lightman, Richard and Sid Macks are out, that leaves Cam’s library guy or the hoodie guy that Lightman captured on his phone.”
“Right.” It irked him a bit that she was able to focus more on analyzing the evidence than he was, so he followed her lead. “When I called Daryl, he and Vi were about a half hour away. He’ll be able to download what the security cameras captured.”
“I’m betting the guy’s wearing a hooded sweatshirt, and we won’t get a look at his face. He had to be out here waiting and watching. He would have spotted the security cameras.”
“Yeah.” Duncan reviewed what had led up to the rose petal shower in his mind. “The woods provide plenty of cover. While you were sleeping I opened the doors for a while. I even stepped out to take a call from Cam.” He scanned the clearing again. He took his gun out of his backpack and tucked it into the waist of his jeans and continued, “There are lots of places he could have concealed himself. Even in the gardening shed. He could have heard my conversation, then watched me lock up the place and go out to the stones, and he grabbed the opportunity.”
“To scare me or to lure me out,” Piper said.
“Come with me.” He punched the code into the pad, then slid open the doors and drew her with him out to the terrace. Alba followed.
After he re-armed the security, he closed the doors and they moved toward the shed. The door was closed, the padlock secure. Any hope of footprints had been erased by the fury of the storm.
“Whoever was here is long gone,” Piper said. “Otherwise Alba would be barking.”
Duncan turned to see that the dog hadn’t ventured beyond the terrace, and she was digging at something. Pressing a hand to the small of Piper’s back, he urged her back to the library doors. Together, they squatted down to see what had caught Alba’s attention.
Duncan picked up the small round piece of plastic.
“She found a clue,” Piper said.
“Some kind of lens cover. And there’s a logo on it, something we can trace. Good girl.” He ran a hand over Alba’s head, and the dog rubbed against his side.
“She was the one who woke me. And she threw herself against the glass doors. She probably scared the wits out of whoever was out here.” When she turned back to Duncan, their knees were nearly brushing. “So you can stop feeling so damn guilty about leaving me alone for a few minutes. You left Alba with me. And I can take care of myself.” She used a finger to poke him in the chest and nearly set him toppling back on his heels.
Yes, he thought. She could. And even though she had that Diana-the-Huntress look back in her eyes, he was going to see that she had backup. And to do that, he needed to keep an objective distance. He raised both hands, palms up. “Agreed.”
For now.
TWO HOURS LATER, PIPER STOOD in the main parlor of the castle stifling the urge to pace. Once Daryl and Vi had arrived, the men had formed a separate team. While she and Vi had made sandwiches for dinner, they’d worked in Adair’s office. Through the open French doors, she watched them still huddled at the computer screen. Duncan stood looking over Daryl’s shoulder. He took his reading glasses off, set them aside and pinched the bridge of his nose.
Something pushed at the edge of her mind, but she couldn’t quite catch hold of it. Hoping to get another push, she continued to study the two men. They were still running through the pictures from the security cameras. She’d been right about the rose petal person wearing a hooded sweatshirt. The cameras hadn’t caught more than pieces of his face. Daryl was using some software program to come up with a composite picture.
What she could clearly read in the body language of the two men was that they weren’t having much luck. The lens case Alba had found belonged to a portable telescope with a powerful lens. Not something that could be easily found at a chain store. Daryl had assigned someone in his office to try to trace where it might have been purchased. It proved someone was keeping a close but distant eye on the castle and its grounds.
No big news there.
There hadn’t been any useful updates from D.C., either. The only relatively interesting piece of news had been provided by Sheriff Skinner. The vase of roses that had been delivered from Margie’s Flowers had been called in from a D.C. florist, and it had been paid for with a stolen credit card over the phone. The call could have been made from anywhere.
She stood there for a few more minutes studying the two men, but whatever was struggling to get foremost into her mind had slipped away again. And she’d found herself just staring at Duncan. He was doing exactly what she’d asked. Keeping his distance. He hadn’t touched her since they’d left the stone arch. They were in agreement that they’d chosen the right solution.
So why was she feeling so … restless? Worse, why was she second-guessing herself? Turning on her heel, she went to the kitchen where she knew she’d find her aunt.
The room was filled with the scent of freshly baked cookies, and Vi was pulling a tray out of the oven. The scent and the memories it triggered immediately eased some of her frustration. “Can I help?”
As if in answer, the teakettle began to shrill.
“You can help me load the tea cart. I think the men could use a snack.”
“They’ve formed their own little investigative team,” Piper muttered as she made the tea and then loaded cups onto the cart.
“They’re worried about you,” Vi said.
On the way to the refrigerator, Piper took a cookie off the cooling rack. “I’ll be fine. I just …”
“What?”
She turned back to face her aunt, cookie in one hand and a pitcher of cream in the other. “I just want my life to go back to normal. Is that so much to ask?”
Vi took the cream and placed it on the cart. Then she met Piper’s eyes. “And what would normal be?”
“My job. My routine. Everything was fine until … dammit.” She bit into the cookie, and barely tasted it.
Vi said nothing.
Piper took another bite of cookie, then set it on the counter. “Your cookies used to fix everything,” she complained.
Vi stepped forward then and ran a hand down her niece’s hair. “What is it you want to fix?”
“I liked my life just fine. It was exactly the way I wanted it to be. Everything was on track. Until the Lightman case. But I was going to handle that. I still can. But seeing