"Hugh," Adele rasped. "It was his idea. The pills. He wanted to marry me, and if you couldn't have kids, you'd have to go to the kitchens, and he'd be free."
"Is that what happened?" Lily said sarcastically. "How can I ever repay you for telling me the truth? I know, I can let you go, right?"
"If you don't, he'll kill me. It's not my fault - "
"Nothing ever is, Adele," Neala said. "Lily, grab her other arm. We don't want the others to miss out on Adele's wonderful stories."
* * *
ROBYN
Robyn watched Detective Findlay walk along the gravel shoulder behind the compound where Hope, Karl and Rhys had gone. He was returning to the car after talking to the rest of the team. He had his gaze down, watching the ground intently, as if it teemed with scorpions, but when a can lay in his path, he stepped on it, giving a start when it crunched underfoot.
Frown lines creased his broad face. When the wind ruffled his hair, he shoved the strands back from his face, frown deepening, gaze returning to its intent study of his path.
Preoccupied, but not with ghosts. Robyn had already learned to recognize that look, that dreaminess, so jarring on his craggy face, like a cowboy wistfully gazing at the mountains, dreaming of a ranch of his own.
This current preoccupation seemed equally out of place, too intense, too angry. Deep in thought, and whatever those thoughts were, he didn't like them.
He climbed into the driver's seat and stared at a dead bug on the windshield, as if trying to commune with its spirit. She didn't expect him to speak. The tension between them had been stretching ever tighter since the medical offices.
She couldn't regret her reaction, nor shake the feeling that it had, under the circumstances, been the right one.
For Detective Findlay, though, this was a job, and she didn't expect him to put himself on the line for Hope and Karl, no more than she expected him to let her - his suspect - do the same. An irreconcilable clash of priorities that had settled into an irreconcilable war of intractability.
Even when Detective Findlay had finally managed to call for backup, it had only seemed to blacken his mood more. Apparently, he was stuck with a team from the sheriff's department, men he didn't know. He'd tried getting hold of a detective named Madoz, wanting him to be in on the takedown, and had been told he was on the way, but there was no sign of him yet.
She cleared her throat. "Detective Findlay - "
"You don't need to call me that."
"What's your name?"
He blinked, apparently having forgotten that somewhere between the gun showdown and the car chase, they'd failed to perform proper introductions.
"John," he said. "But everyone calls me Finn."
"Which do you prefer?"
He paused, as if it had been so long since anyone asked, he wasn't sure. "Finn's fine."
"Okay, so is the team ready to - "
A rap at the window. Finn lowered it. A beefy man leaned in too far, the invasion of space making the detective's shoulders square.
"Alvarez," the man said. "Just got here. My boys tell me you don't like my plan, Detective."
"I don't see any reason to put Ms. Peltier in further - "
"No danger, Detective. My boys are the best. I need her on-site to ID her friends, make sure we get them out."
"Out of what?"
"We don't know what we're facing in there. Our records show it's a multifamily residence. Some kind of commune, we think. We have to be prepared for the worst."
"Which is why Ms. Peltier shouldn't go in. I can ID her friends."
"We'd prefer her, for absolute confirmation."