Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
invading her privacy. Instead he was studying the
platter of festively decorated cookies when he
heard a soft sound. Lifting his head, he looked
around, frowning. It came again and he
straightened. He didn’t have much experience with
children, but he knew a giggle when he heard it. A
high-pitched little girl’s giggle.
He took a few steps and looked around the
corner toward the service porch, then the other
way, into the long hallway leading to the front
entry and the curving staircase. Seeing nothing, he
moved in that direction.
“No, silly.”
He went still, startled, quickly looking both
ways. The voice sounded like it was right in the
room with him. Bright, full of amusement, and yet
he saw nothing.
“Not out there. Down here!”
He blinked, looking around. Down where?
His eyes shifted toward the door leading to the
basement. The investigating team had been down
there, all of them, not an hour before. What the
hell…?
“Are you coming, or not?”
Matt strode forward decisively and pulled open
the door. At the bottom of the narrow staircase
descending into the darkened basement, he caught a
glimpse of something white just before it
disappeared to the right. Starting down, he pulled
his flashlight off his belt. Again, childish giggles
floated to him, now coming from the cluttered
room at the bottom of the stairs, and he flicked on
the beam. It cut through the gloom and lit dancing
dust motes and the rough wooden stairs.
“Abby?” he whispered, moving forward
cautiously. He didn’t want to frighten her. If the
child was playing some sort of elaborate prank,
he’d let her parents explain the trouble she’d
caused. His heart lifted at the thought of returning
their daughter to them none the worse for wear. He
moved quickly, eyes scanning the space. “Abby,
where are you?”
“Here!” the voice sang. “I’m over here.”
Matt swung his flashlight left and right. The
sound seemed to be coming from all around him.
He shivered. It was freezing cold in the basement.
Outside, the snow was piled up around the
foundation in drifts, but he didn’t remember it
being this cold when he’d been down here before.
He could see his breath, lingering before his face
in a misty fog.
“Where are you, honey?” he called. “Your mom
and dad are frantic. This isn’t a very nice game.”
“Not a game.”
The voice was right behind him. He jumped and
turned.
Standing not five feet from him was the child,
her hair mussed, her little feet bare beneath the
hem of her Beauty and the Beast nightie. But
something wasn’t quite…right. She was so pale
her skin looked colorless. And her eyes were
almost unnaturally wide. She wasn’t smiling. She
was just—staring. Matt’s heart kicked hard against
his rib cage, reacting to the unexpectedness of
finding her there.
“Abby,” he said with mingled relief and
concern. “Everyone has been so worried. Are you
okay?”
She shook her head slowly, still staring, still not
blinking.
“Are you hurt?” He took a step toward her. She
nodded, her expression flat. “Where? I can take
you upstairs, and we can have someone fix it,
okay?”
Again, she shook her head.
“Yes, it’s okay. No one is going to be mad.
They’re just going to be so happy to see you…”
Her stoic expression and her stillness, in such
marked contrast to the happy giggle and teasing
voice he’d heard, had him completely unnerved.
She lifted her arm and pointed.
“The refrigerator?” Matt frowned at the beat-up
old appliance. “What about…” He turned back and
stiffened, his whole body going cold.
She was gone. Where moments before the child
had stood, there was nothing but a dusty floor.
Matt staggered back a step, unwilling to believe
what his eyes were telling him. “Abby?” he called,
his voice hoarse.
She couldn’t have vanished. That didn’t happen.
He was a cop, a highly trained detective. He dealt
in what was real. The little girl had been there.
Moving quickly, he swung the beam of his
flashlight under the stairs, into the dim corners,
growing more frantic by the moment. He searched
every corner, all the while calling her name.
Finally, after looking in every inch of the basement
and exhausting every theory about how she might
have vanished into thin air, he turned and stared at
the refrigerator. Someone had looked in it, hadn’t
they?
But he didn’t think they had. There was a pile of
boxes in front of the stained doors and he didn’t
recall them being disturbed. Moving stiffly, he
shoved the pile to one side.
“Please, God,” he muttered, reaching out with a
trembling hand, curling it around the cold metal
handle. “Please.” He closed his eyes, took a deep
breath and opened the door.
Moments later, he was forcefully reminded why
he no longer prayed. He’d long ago given up
believing anyone was listening.
Chapter Two
Matt entered his small house, moving slowly, so
tired he could hardly lift his feet. He closed the
door on the snowfall that had begun again in
earnest, leaning against it for a moment before
pulling off his coat. Without bothering to shake the
flakes from the shoulders, he dropped it on the
floor.
At one time, he wouldn’t have done such a thing.
But at one time, there had been someone to fuss at
him to hang it up.
“You weren’t actually raised in
a barn, were you?”
The voice seemed to drift
through the empty house. Matt scowled.
Resolutely refusing to allow himself to go down
that road, he toed off his shoes and emptied his
pockets onto the small table against the wall.
Badge, ID, wallet and keys all went into a frosted
white glass bowl sitting there for that purpose.
Another badge was already lying on top of a ratty
black wallet in the bowl, and he touched its
gleaming surface tenderly before moving away,
unbuckling the gun holster crossed over his chest.
Pausing before a painting of a landscape on the
wall, he pulled on a corner and it swung open
silently on well-oiled hinges. They’d had the safe
installed right after they moved in, because both
had found gun cabinets too obvious. He worked the
combination absently, heard the lock click and
pulled the door open. A few practiced movements
and the straps were wrapped around the holster
holding his service revolver, and he placed it
inside. He spared a tired look for the other gun
already secreted there before closing the safe.
Had he not been so completely exhausted, he
might have been able to muster the energy to be
really angry. Not only had he argued with his
superior, but he’d spent the past four hours telling
the department shrink he didn’t need to take any
time off. Neither of them had listened to him. Not
for the first time, he regretted ever telling them the
truth. If he’d just kept his mouth shut and never
admitted it had been Abigail Marie Reynolds
herself who had led him to her body, he wouldn’t
have been put through the administrative
nightmare.
Grimacing, he stumbled to the overstuffed sofa
in the cluttered living room and fell onto it,
propping his elbows on his knees and sinking his
face into his hands. He shouldn’t have said
anything. He should have just said he had gone
down to the basement because he’d had a hunch.
Then no one would have looked at him with that
humiliating mix of disbelief and pity.
“It’s not uncommon,” Dr. Pergola had said, her
eyes kind as she studied him from behind her
glasses. “When the psyche receives a profound
shock, it finds ways to tell you you’re not dealing
with the trauma. You didn’t take any time off after
Brad…”
“This has nothing to do with Brad,” he said, his
teeth clenched. “I saw her. She was there. She
pointed at the refrigerator—”
“Do you really expect me to believe the ghost of
a six-year-old girl led you to her body?” She
angled her head to one side. “Does it sound
rational to you?”
As much as he hated to, he had to agree that,
even though he’d seen it, it didn’t.
“Take some time off,” Branson had said.
“You’ve had a rough time. No one is going to think
any less of you.”
“Except you,” Matt mumbled aloud now in the
dim room, pressing his fingers against gritty eyes.
He’d seen the way his boss looked at him, as
though he was weak, compromised. But then,
Branson had been looking at him with derision
from the moment he’d found out two of his best
detectives had hidden the fact they were lovers for
three years.
It hadn’t been that they were ashamed of it. He
hadn’t been ashamed of Brad. He’d loved him.
He’d believed it was something of a miracle when,
after being partners for nearly a year, Brad had
suddenly grabbed him and kissed him. He’d had
feelings for Brad almost from the moment he met
him, but he hadn’t imagined they’d been returned.
When their off-duty relationship eventually ripened
into love, they’d both agreed what they did on their
own time was none of the department’s business.
He had steadfastly continued to believe it. Brad,
on the other hand, had begun to chafe at the
constraints. He’d wanted to be more open, but
Matt knew Branson, and had known the least he’d
do was reassign them to different partners. Being
right about Branson’s reaction had been little
comfort when Brad had been murdered.
Matt had called to remind him to pick up a case
of beer for their Labor Day barbecue. Brad had
stopped at a convenience store on his way home
and walked in on a robbery. He hadn’t even had
time to draw his weapon.
The officers sent to notify Brad’s family hadn’t
known about their relationship. They’d gone to his
mother. Matt learned the news when Brad’s
brother came to the house and walked into the
backyard.
The moment was crystallized in Matt’s mind. He
knew he’d never forget it. He’d been grilling
burgers, laughing with his brother and sister-in-
law over the fact Brad was late yet again. It was
something of a running joke. He’d turned, a bottle
of beer raised to his lips, when Brad’s brother
Brendan stepped onto the deck. And he’d known,
before a word had been said, from the shattered
expression on his face.
From that moment forward, he couldn’t smell
the scent of grilling meat without feeling bile hit
the back of his throat. After the painful clarity of
Brendan’s face, everything else became a blur. He
knew his sister-in-law had cried. He’d heard her,
as if from a long distance. He knew his brother
Bill had caught his arms and lowered him into a
chair. Someone had taken the meat off the grill, but
not before it was burned beyond recognition. He
just kept seeing Brendan’s eyes—the pain, the
apology for being the one who had to tell him…
Brad’s mom had come to the house to get his
dress uniform. Brad had been very specific that if
anything happened to him, he was to be buried in
his blues. Matt wanted to go to the funeral home
with her but couldn’t think how to explain his
presence. He was supposed to be Brad’s partner,
not his lover. Even then, he couldn’t bring himself
to openly admit it.
He went to work as usual, accepted the
condolences of his fellow officers and walked
through each day on autopilot. At night he lay in
their bed, staring at the ceiling, unable to accept it,
to believe Brad was really gone. How could he be
gone? They hadn’t done all the things they wanted
to yet. They’d never been to Hawaii, they hadn’t
skied Aspen. They’d just bought the house. He
couldn’t seem to wrap his head around any of it,