“Kind of medieval, don’t you think? Birth mothers go on to have normal lives all the time.”
“I did some checking on Kristen. Her family is in tough financial straits. They lost a lot last year. This marriage will fix a lot of problems. A baby might tarnish her image.”
“Kristen always got what she wanted.” Her gaze dropped to the date marked digitally on the bottom of victim one’s photo. “She didn’t care who she hurt in the process.”
“It’s time I had another talk with Kristen.”
“You believe me?” Surprise coated the words.
“Yes.” He wasn’t her friend or enemy. He was an impartial cop looking for a killer. But she sensed she could trust him.
Eva trusting a cop. The thought almost made her laugh. “Fair enough.” She rose.
He straightened. “Eva, we found a journal in Lisa’s condo. It was written in code.”
And it seemed he trusted her a bit as well. That felt really good. “Lisa loved the idea of codes and keeping her thoughts very private. I taught her the ROT13 code at school.” She explained the system.
“Thanks.” He studied her. “Have you been back to Price?”
“No.”
“Have you considered it?”
“I’ve thought about it, but I just haven’t found the time.” She shook her head. “Who am I kidding? I’ve avoided it like the plague.”
He leaned toward her. “Would you be willing to go back now?”
“You think it’ll jog my memory?”
“It could.”
The thought of walking the grounds that had been the source of so much pain robbed her of breath. Yet the running in fear from Josiah bothered her more. “Sure, I’ll go.”
“How about right now? How about I drive you now?”
The challenge in his voice goaded even more than the fear. “Yeah, sure why not?”
He grinned. “I’ll get my keys.”
The drive to Price University took Garrison less than forty minutes. She sat in the front seat, her hands folded in her lap as she watched the city pass by and then slowly thin until only countryside passed by her window.
“You doing okay?” he said.
She shrugged, determined to keep her nerves in check. “Last time I was in a police car I was being carted off to jail.” She tossed one of his grins back at him but sensed hers looked a little strained. “Not one of my brighter moments.”
His fingers tightened on the wheel. “You got a raw deal.”
“Yeah, tell me about it.” She flexed her fingers, not willing to dig into bitterness now. “So you really think a trip down memory lane is going to help?”
“It might jog something loose.”
“I hope it does. For a long time I didn’t want to remember any more than I had. Now I want to know what happened every second of that day.”
Eva wasn’t sure if she’d have made this trip alone. But having Garrison so close eased her fears. She’d like to have filled the silence with conversation, but she didn’t know how to make small talk with him. With the bar patrons all she needed was a bit of sports information or a tidbit from the entertainment section of the paper, but with him, all that just felt flat and foolish.
“So what makes a guy chase murderers?”
“Someone has to.”
“But why you?”
He shrugged. “After I got out of the air force, it made sense. My dad had been a cop for thirty years.”
She’d noted before that the academy class ring was the only jewelry he wore. “How’d your wife die?”
“That’s an odd question.”
“Sorry. Curious, I suppose.”
For a moment he kept his eyes forward on the road. A muscle in the side of his cheek pulsed as if he’d not answer. “Suicide.”
The word sounded wrenched from his chest, as if he’d confessed a terrible secret. “Why?”
Again another pause, as she sensed she’d just shined a light into the darkest of corners. “She’d been ill for some time.”
“My mother killed herself. She didn’t like living without my dad. And then she got sick. I guess living was just too much work.”
“She had you.”
“And your wife had you. Sometimes we just aren’t good enough to save them.”
He shot her a glance. And in that moment she saw a lifetime of pain and anger. “Sounds like you’ve thought about that a lot.”
“That’s one advantage to going to prison. You’ve got time to think.”
This big strong man who looked nearly bulletproof carried a wound that, judging by the added tension in his shoulders, hadn’t really healed. And for the oddest reason she didn’t feel so alone knowing she wasn’t the only damaged person in this car.
Garrison slowed as they neared the white columns that marked the university’s entrance and wound down the main entrance road toward the first parking lot. It had been paved since she was last here and more bike racks and even security panic buttons had been added.
Price was nestled in the rolling hillside; its old brick buildings with white columns dated back to the early 1900s. Lush green lawns, thick and well manicured, covered the ground around meandering paths.
Clean, neat students walked toward the main quadrangle where the school’s oldest four buildings bracketed the main common area. They smiled and one laughed, tossing back her hair.
For a moment she sat and wondered what good could possibly come of this visit.
Her backpack slung on her shoulder, she stepped from the car and moved with her back ramrod straight and her eyes focused ahead. On the path to the main buildings, gravel crunched under her feet. “There’d been a time when I was that girl.”
“You carefree?” The teasing tone made her smile.
“Well, not exactly like them.” And before she thought to censor herself, she said, “For the one brief year I was here, I believed in possibilities and building a new shining life.”
He stood nearly a foot taller than her and his frame blocked the sun and covered her with his shadow. “You can still have that.”
“I know. I will.”
The scent of boxwoods greeted them as she passed an old building they’d called East Wing and moved across the green quad toward the road that led to sorority row. As they moved along, she gave him a brief history of the school, surprised she remembered so much. Her house had been the third on the right, but she wasn’t sure what she’d find now, knowing the house that had been hers had been ravaged by fire.
When they topped the
little hill, she was surprised to see that the building had been replaced with a new house. A bright shining white house, with a wide front porch complete with rockers and lush planters filled with winter pansies. By the main entrance a brass plaque read CROSS HOUSE.
“Cross House.” Bitterness twisted inside her. This was no doubt Darius’s handiwork.
“His father rebuilt the house in his son’s honor.”
“How nice.”
They climbed the front steps, listening as music drifted out of the wide-open front door. The singer crooned on and on about second chances. Fitting, she thought as she pushed through the open front door.
She paused by the threshold.
“You okay? ”
His quiet and unyielding presence shored up shaky nerves. “Great.”
They moved inside the house. The foyer was carpeted and the walls a soft beige. A creak from a top center staircase had her looking up. A slim girl wearing sweats and a Price T-shirt and her dark hair up in a ponytail came down the stairs. The girl glanced from Eva to Garrison and back, trying to figure out their relationship. “You planning on going here?”
Before Garrison could pull out his badge, Eva grabbed on to the opening and took advantage of her youthful appearance. “I am. The college keeps sending me a bunch of brochures and so my brother and I thought we’d have a look around.”
The girl’s attention flickered back up to Garrison whose amused expression nearly made Eva laugh.
The slight tension in the girl’s shoulders eased. “So you a transfer student?”
“What makes you say that? ”
“You don’t have the wide-eyed look of the high school girls.”
“Thanks for noticing. Most people think I’m just a kid.”
Garrison cleared his throat. “That’s not entirely true.”
Eva glanced up at him, and for the briefest moment she saw raw desire flash in his eyes. Instead of scaring her, it sent a thrill of desire shooting through her limbs.
“Would you like a tour of the first floor of the house? Upstairs is limited to sisters only.”
“That would be great,” Eva said. “The house looks so new.”