Christmas Confessions. Kathleen Long
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Christmas Confessions - Kathleen Long страница 8
Jack unfolded himself from the car and headed toward the door. Around the side, she’d said.
Dark sidewalk. Isolated entrance.
The woman was nothing if not a picture of what not to do when devising personal security.
She’d provided him with her home address, but Jack had already been able to ascertain that information without so much as pulling a single departmental string.
He’d tracked her by working backward from her postcard confession site through the registration database and public contact information he’d pulled online.
If Boone Shaw—or anyone, for that matter—decided to target Abby Conroy, nothing about the woman’s life would make finding her a challenge.
Now that Jack had had time to stew on the information he’d received, he was certain Boone Shaw had gone underground for a reason.
Shaw had never vanished so thoroughly before, and even though he’d never been picked up on any sort of charge during the eleven years since the trial, he’d left a trail.
Until now.
Business dealings. A new photography studio. Credit card and mortgage debt.
The man had led a normal life, a full life, a life he didn’t deserve.
A calm sureness slid through Jack’s system as he headed toward Abby Conroy’s door.
There was always a chance Shaw wasn’t the person physically sending the cards, but Jack had no doubt he was responsible. Somehow.
The man had killed Emma, just as he’d killed Melinda Simmons and the others.
Jack had seen it in Shaw’s eyes the day they’d pulled the man into custody along with the piles of so-called modeling shots he’d accumulated during his time as a photographer.
The man had been guilty—a sexual predator with a camera. And his victims had been only too willing to pose, believing his promises of bright futures, bright lights, big dreams come true.
“Can I help you?” A thirtysomething man wearing only a pair of jeans, sneakers and gray sweatshirt stepped into Jack’s path.
Jack’s hand reached automatically for his weapon before he remembered he’d left his service revolver back in Arizona, part of the agreement he’d struck with his chief.
The weight of his backup weapon in his ankle holster provided comfort, but reaching for the gun didn’t fall under the subtle category, nor was the move necessary.
The ghost of Boone Shaw had Jack jumping like a rookie.
Besides, the man before him was more than likely nothing but a neighbor, someone suspicious of a man approaching Abby Conroy’s door.
Jack couldn’t fault him for that, but he could ask questions.
Jack measured the man, from his feet to his face. “A bit cold to be outside without a coat, isn’t it?”
“I spend a lot of time over here.” The man’s dark eyes shifted, their focus bouncing from side to side, never making direct eye contact. “With Abby,” he added, as if use of her name would prove something to Jack, somehow put him in his place.
Jack extended his hand. “Detective Jack Grant. I’m here on official business.”
The other man blinked, his expression morphing from aggressive to vacant. “Dwayne Franklin. Abby and I have a…relationship.”
Jack doubted the validity of the man’s statement based on his inability to make eye contact.
If anything, the man was a neighbor who thought he had a relationship with Abby Conroy—yet another security issue Jack planned to talk to the woman about.
Jack flashed his shield, and the man uttered a quick good-night as he headed toward the house next door.
Abby pulled the door open, having apparently heard voices.
“Detective Grant?”
“You might as well start calling me Jack.” He jerked a thumb toward the neighbor’s house. “Does your neighbor make a practice of lurking outside your house?”
A crease formed between Abby’s brows and Jack noted her coloring seemed paler than it had been that morning. “Dwayne?”
Jack nodded.
“He hung the lights for me earlier. He was probably checking his work.”
Jack gave another sharp nod, saying nothing. Let the woman believe what she wanted to believe. As far as Jack was concerned, her neighbor’s actions were a bit too overprotective.
Jack had always been a master at assessing people and their situations, and this situation was no different.
Abby Conroy apparently trusted everyone, her postcard confessors and loitering neighbor included.
Jack trusted no one.
Any work they did together ought to prove interesting, if nothing else.
He chuckled under his breath, quickly catching himself and smoothing his features. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d found anything humorous. But if he was forced to work alongside Ms. Conroy in order to flesh out this lead, he might as well enjoy himself.
“Something funny, Detective Grant?”
Confusion flashed in the woman’s pale eyes, yet it was a second emotion lurking there that sobered Jack, an emotion visibly battling for position.
Fear.
Maybe Abby Conroy wasn’t as naive as Jack had thought.
He shook his head. “I meant no disrespect, but you and I need to talk about protecting yourself.”
He patted the door frame as he pushed the door shut behind them. The flimsy door boasted nothing more than a keyed lock.
He tapped the knob. “There’s this new gadget called a dead bolt. You might want to check it out.”
But his warning fell on apparently deaf ears. Abby showed no sign of having heard a word he’d said.
She hadn’t explained the reason for her call, and Jack hadn’t pressed her. He’d hoped she wanted to talk to him about a change of heart regarding the archived postcards.
But as Abby pointed to a stack of postcards sitting on an end table, then reached for one in particular, Jack’s stomach caught.
“He’s sent another, hasn’t he?”
She handled the card by the edges, handing it to Jack even as she spoke, not answering his question, but rather reciting the card’s message from memory.
“She