More Than a Hero. Marilyn Pappano

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he wanted, but only for a few days.

      “As long as his law license is active, he still has that privilege. As the senator’s assistant, I occasionally check out records for him. We can take them for forty-eight hours.”

      “And Judge Markham’s had this file for…?”

      She sighed. “It was due back last Friday.”

      Jake’s smile was thin. He’d tried to set up an interview with the judge the previous Wednesday. The old goat had turned him down, then gotten possession of the transcript. And it was the only copy the court had. Martha had told him that, too.

      “Maybe he wanted to refresh his memory before he talked to you. Surely you want to interview him as well as the senator.”

      “Maybe. Except that he turned me down when I called him last week. Said he had nothing to say on the matter and hung up on me.”

      “So that’s why you just showed up at the senator’s office,” Kylie murmured.

      Jake kicked an acorn and sent it tumbling into the yellowing grass alongside the sidewalk. “Do you ever call him Dad?”

      Kylie blinked.

      “Most people call their fathers Dad or Pop or Father or even by their first names. What do you call yours besides ‘the senator’?”

      “Sir,” she answered.

      He would have laughed if she hadn’t been serious. That was some kind of warm, loving relationship they shared. What inspired her loyalty to him? It had to be more than just a paycheck.

      “So…if I want to see the transcript, I’ve got to get it from Markham.”

      She cleared her throat delicately. “It might be best if you let me get it.”

      “Why would you do that?”

      “Because it’s a matter of public record. He doesn’t have the right to—to hide it.” She swallowed hard, obviously aware that she was implying wrongdoing on the judge’s behalf and not liking it.

      And what if Markham was hiding the transcript on her father’s say-so? Riordan might be out of town, but he was obviously in touch. Someone was keeping him informed…and, possibly, taking orders from him.

      “I’ll stop by Judge Markham’s house later today,” she went on. “I’ll—I’ll let you know if I get it.”

      They came to a stop at an intersection. They’d left the businesses behind and were in a neighborhood of moderately priced houses. Most of them were old, a few with their original wood siding, the rest updated to aluminum. The yards were roomy, the trees mature, their leaves turning shades of yellow, red and purple. The best friend he’d had in his months there had lived in the middle of the block. Back then, Jake had envied his house, his bike, his roots…but now he couldn’t even remember his name.

      “Does it bother you that everyone says this is an open-and-shut case,” he began conversationally, “and yet no one wants to talk about it?”

      “A lot people believe the past belongs in the past.” Kylie started across the street to their left, and he followed. On the other side, she turned back in the direction they’d just come.

      “Especially people running for governor.”

      She gave him a sharp look but didn’t comment. “Just because you’re interested in what happened to Charley Baker doesn’t mean anyone else is.”

      “My agent is. My editor. My publisher. I’m already under contract. I’m going to write the book regardless of what your father and his cronies want.”

      “What about Therese Franklin? Doesn’t what she wants count?”

      He called to mind Therese’s image as she’d been that September—three years old, a girlie girl, looking like an angel with silky brown curls, huge blue eyes, a Cupid’s-bow mouth. She’d been left alone with her parents’ lifeless bodies for at least twelve hours. When they were discovered the next morning, she was sitting next to her mother, blood staining her white nightgown, eyes red from crying.

      Did she remember anything from that night? Probably not. Three was mercifully young. But it had changed her life forever. He knew her grandfather had died, knew the grandmother—the last family she had left in the world—had Alzheimer’s and was also dying. This wasn’t the best time to bring her parents’ murders back into the limelight…but there was no best time to relive something like that.

      “I haven’t spoken to Therese yet,” he replied. “I don’t know what she wants.”

      “The senator has. She doesn’t want you dredging all this up again. She pleaded with him to stop you.”

      Guilt niggled down his spine. “I may not need to interview her. She was so young.”

      “She’s still so young.”

      “She’s twenty-five.”

      “The youngest twenty-five you’ll ever meet. The best thing you could do for her is forget this and go away.”

      Forget it. As if it could ever be that simple. From the time he’d started his first book, he’d wanted to write about Charley’s case, though he’d found reasons to put it off. He was already contracted for a different book. He was too close to the story. He needed more experience to do it justice. And the worst reason: he hadn’t been sure he could handle what he found out. But then the last book had come out, and the guy had gotten a new trial. Charley had pleaded with him, and he’d known it was time.

      He shoved his hands into his pockets. “I can’t do that. I told you—I’m already under contract. Besides, I made a promise to Charley.”

      “And you’d put a convicted murderer ahead of his only surviving victim?”

      “You’re very good at thinking the worst of me, you know.”

      A flush tinged her cheeks, but she said nothing.

      “What if Charley’s telling the truth? What if he’s spent twenty-two years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit? If the real killer is walking around free, still living here in Riverview, still pretending to be an upstanding citizen?”

      She shook her head, her diamond stud creating small sun flashes. “There was no other suspect.”

      “Because they didn’t look for one.”

      “They had no reason to.”

      “They had no reason to suspect Charley except that he was convenient. He lived next door. Didn’t have any ties to the town. Didn’t have money for a lawyer. Didn’t have anyone who cared whether he was railroaded into prison.”

      “What about his wife? The senator said she believed he was guilty.”

      Jake scuffed his boots along the pavement. It was hard to say whether Angela Baker had really believed Charley was guilty. She’d been unhappy for a time before the killings. She’d wanted a different life, a better life, for herself and their son. She’d

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