Deadly Christmas Secrets. Shirlee McCoy
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As far as Harper knew, the place hadn’t even had one showing.
She turned onto the driveway, the truck bumping over deep ruts. She got about a tenth of a mile from the house before she had to stop, a police cruiser blocking her from driving farther. Not from the local sheriff’s department. This cruiser was a state police car. Jeb must have called them in. Snowy Vista had a very small police force, and murder wasn’t something Harper thought they’d had to deal with much during the history of the town.
She eased the truck off the driveway and parked it in tangled weeds, waiting as a police officer approached. He motioned for her to roll down the window, his face shadowed by the brim of his hat.
“Ma’am, you’re going to have to turn around,” he said.
“I’m here for a friend of mine,” she responded. “Logan Fitzgerald?”
“You’re going to have to turn around,” he repeated. “No entry to the property by anyone. It’s a crime scene.”
“I know, but—”
“That’s fine, officer,” Stella cut in. “Mind if we wait at the mouth of the driveway? Logan was being questioned by Sheriff Hunter, but he’s finished now, and we’d like to get him home.”
The officer eyed Stella for a moment, then nodded. “Fine by me, but if I catch either of you out of the vehicle, I’ll arrest you.”
“No worries. I’m in no mood to spend the night in jail,” Stella responded.
That seemed to satisfy the officer.
He walked back to his car, climbed into the vehicle.
“I’m thinking you’d better do what he said,” Stella said. “My boss gets any inkling that we’re bothering the local PD, and he won’t be happy.”
“I wouldn’t want you to lose your job because of my actions,” Harper replied as she backed toward the end of the driveway.
Stella laughed. “Please. Chance wouldn’t fire me. He’s not that kind of guy. He would lecture me and assign me to desk duty for a month. A fate way worse than being fired, if you ask me.” She pulled out her cell phone and texted something. “That should get Logan moving. He’s not going to like that we’re just sitting here waiting for trouble to find us.”
“There are police everywhere,” Harper pointed out. She could see them—flashlights moving along the ground, shadowy forms bobbing through the lingering snow.
“And?”
“Whoever killed that guy would be a fool to try something this close to all these officers.”
“I’d say most criminals are fools. Smart, but fools nonetheless. They think they’re too intelligent to be caught, too savvy to ever be found out. So they make mistakes. Stupid ones. Like trying to kill a woman who’s sitting a few hundred yards from a police cruiser.”
“You’re assuming whoever did it is still around.”
“Statistically speaking, the likelihood that the perp is hanging around watching all the action is pretty high.”
Not a pleasant thought.
Harper tried to tell herself that Stella was wrong, that the likelihood was slim to none, but Stella had been at this kind of work for a lot longer than Harper had been shaping clay. It was obvious from the way she moved, the way she spoke, her gritty rough edge that had just a bit of softness beneath it.
Stella knew what she was talking about, and maybe the criminal wasn’t the only one who was a fool. Harper had been on her own for a long time. She wasn’t used to taking other people’s advice. She wasn’t really used to being around other people.
She’d been social before, but not eager to have the kind of close and intimate relationships most people longed for. She’d tried it with Daniel, because it had seemed like the thing to do, and because he’d been charming and funny and made her feel like a million bucks.
When that hadn’t worked out, she’d been more upset with herself than heartbroken.
She knew how bad her family was at relationships.
She knew how easily fooled they were, how easily taken advantage of, and so she’d made it her goal to be dependent on no one but herself. She hadn’t wanted to end up like her mother—wandering from one bad relationship to another. She hadn’t wanted to be like Lydia—settling for someone because she was afraid of having no one, of having to do it all alone, provide for everything herself.
She’d wanted something different from that, and she’d gotten it.
Only it hadn’t been quite as wonderful as she’d thought it would be. It hadn’t been nearly as fulfilling as she’d thought it should be. Maybe if Lydia hadn’t died, Harper would have changed her tune, made a few deep connections, spent a little more time building relationships and friendships.
She would have liked to believe that was what would have happened. She’d realized after her sister’s death that those things were a lot more important than she’d thought.
It would have helped to have them when she’d been going through the murder investigation. When she’d been the prime suspect in her sister’s and niece’s murders.
She shuddered, pulling her coat a little tighter.
She had the heat turned up high. It wasn’t cold in the truck cab, but she was cold, all the memories that she’d tucked away, all the things she tried really hard not to think about suddenly right there at the forefront of her mind.
Something tapped on her window, near her head, and she screamed so loudly, she thought the truck shook with it. Then she realized she was the one shaking.
She turned, expecting...
She didn’t know what.
A masked killer, maybe?
A bogeyman come to life?
Instead, she met Logan’s eyes. They were black in the darkness, his hair wet from snow. A few flakes shone white against his hair and coat.
“You going to let me in?” he asked, tapping again.
“Right. Sure,” she said, her voice trembling as she unlocked the door and scooted to the center of the seat.
Frigid air filled the truck as he climbed in beside her. He looked tired, and he looked angry.
He also looked...good.
She glanced away, uncomfortable with the direction of her thoughts.
She had enough to worry about without adding someone like Logan to the mix.
“How’d everything go?” Stella asked, her voice breaking through the tension.
“About as well as can be expected when the prime suspect is dead,” Logan muttered.
“No