Secrets of the Lynx. Aimee Thurlo
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Kendra remembered one report she’d read. Paul’s first partner, the one before Judy Whitacre, had claimed that he had an almost uncanny ability to separate lies from the truth. “Your foster father was a medicine man, and I know there’s a lot of psychology involved in healing rituals. Did he teach you how to read people?”
“No, it’s not like that.” He paused for a moment before continuing. “What Hosteen Silver did was open my mind so I could use the gift he’d given me.”
She gave him a curious look. “I don’t understand. When you say ‘gift,’ are you talking something supernatural?”
He shrugged. “I can get you results. Do you want my help or not?”
She hesitated, then nodded. “Okay, but I’ll take lead. Agreed?”
“Sure.” He pulled into the parking lot beside the police substation. “You don’t really trust me, do you?”
She weighed her answer carefully. “Intuition tells me that there’s more to you than meets the eye, and intangibles make me uneasy.”
“Just remember we’re on the same side.”
“I know. That’s the only reason I’ve allowed you to get actively involved.”
“No, there’s another reason—one you’re keeping to yourself.”
His insight was right on target and took her by surprise. She suspected that Paul held the key to taking down Miller. If Miller was really in the area, and he’d come after Paul ten months after his initial attempt to kill the judge, there had to be a reason. Providing she could figure out what that was, she might be able to use it to draw Miller out of the shadows.
She looked at Paul with new respect. No one had ever been able to read her like that, yet Paul had somehow guessed that she’d been holding out on him.
“See? That’s part of what I do,” he said.
“How? Will you ever tell me how you developed your...skills? I’d be interested.”
“Maybe someday,” he said quietly. “For now, let’s go see what we can learn from Yolanda and her boyfriend. Hopefully, they’ll actually know something of value.”
* * *
T HE ROOM USED to question suspects was purposely kept just a little too warm. The subject was meant to be uncomfortable. The straight-backed wooden chair and simple wooden table were other ways of cutting creature comforts.
Paul and Kendra were in an adjacent room with Preston. Standing next to the two-way glass, they watched Alex, who was sitting alone in the room.
“He’s an old hand at this,” Preston said. “He’s only said one word—‘lawyer.’ You’ll have more leverage with Yolanda. She wants to cooperate. It’s clear to her that she could go to jail if convicted of harboring a fugitive.”
“It’s good that you have her thinking about that. I’ll interview her now,” Kendra said.
“You going in, too?” Preston asked his brother.
“Yeah.”
“Down the hall, second door on the left,” Preston said, indicating the direction with a nod.
They walked into the room several seconds later and found Yolanda pacing like a caged lion.
“Sit down!” Kendra snapped.
Yolanda obeyed instantly. “You’ve got to believe me. I had no idea there was a warrant out on Alex. If I’d known, I wouldn’t have gone within a mile of him.”
“The fact remains, you were harboring a fugitive. We could send you right back to jail.”
“No, listen, I didn’t know!”
Kendra sat across the table from Yolanda while Paul leaned against the wall, watching them.
“You called Paul Grayhorse yesterday afternoon and asked for his help. You claimed to be afraid of your boyfriend, a police officer, but Alex isn’t a cop. So what’s the deal, Yolanda? What were you trying to pull?” Kendra demanded.
“I didn’t call anyone yesterday. My cell phone didn’t even work up by Navajo Lake,” Yolanda said.
“You weren’t at Navajo Lake. You were home. You telephoned me from your house phone,” Paul said. “I recorded the call, which came at 4:27 p.m.”
“I never made that call! I wasn’t here,” she said, her voice rising. “And I don’t have a boyfriend who’s a cop. I hate cops. N-o offense,” Yolanda told Kendra quickly, clearly regretting the comment. Looking back at Paul, she added, “Dude, I never even heard of you before today.”
“Did anyone actually see you over at Navajo Lake?” Kendra asked her.
“No, we were in the tent most of the time. Remember I told you—” She stopped, then added, “Wait a sec. You said I called you yesterday from my apartment?”
“Yeah,” Paul said.
“Then someone must have broken in,” she said. “That’s the only thing that makes sense. Maybe it was the landlord. He’s kinda creepy.”
Kendra said nothing. Sometimes, unnerved by the silence, a suspect would talk and in the process reveal something important.
Prepared to wait, Kendra glanced casually at Paul and saw that, although his face was void of expression, his eyes were alert. He was taking in everything around him.
For a moment she wondered what lay just beyond that steel-edged resolve. Paul kept his emotions well hidden, yet she knew just how close he’d come to being killed twice in the past year. He’d also lost his partner, and she suspected that beneath the surface he was concealing a lot of anger. Paul carried himself well and was the sexiest man she’d ever met, but was he also a dangerous man, now on the edge?
Kendra stared at the floor for a beat, forcing herself to concentrate, then focused back on their suspect.
The interview continued. “I’d like to believe that you had nothing to do with that phone call to Paul Grayhorse, but you’re going to have to convince me, Yolanda,” Kendra said. “A woman called, so it couldn’t have been your landlord. He’s male.”
Paul came up and stood behind Kendra. “She’s not lying,” he said, his voice barely above a whisper.
Surprised, Kendra turned and saw the utter calm she’d come to associate with Paul etched clearly on his face. With effort, she tore her gaze from his and looked back at Yolanda.
“You said you had a recording of the call I supposedly made to you?” Yolanda asked Paul.
“Yeah, it’s in my voice mail,” Paul said.
“Let me hear it.”
Paul