Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
guards on duty inside the open gates were checking
identification against a list on clipboards. Clearing
the line was going to take a few minutes.
Meanwhile, the reporters were scanning each face
and shouting questions at people they recognized.
Kiernan was standing on the side nearest the street.
Matt caught his arm just above his elbow.
“Stand on the inside,” he urged softly.
Kiernan looked up at him, eyes wide under the
brim of the ball cap. “What?”
“Move to the inside, away from the street.” He
glanced meaningfully toward the line of reporters.
Kiernan followed the direction of his look.
“Oh.” He stepped around Matt, sending him an
amused look. “Putting your body between me and
the vultures? Very heroic, Officer.”
“I can and will stick you headfirst into a snow
bank,” Matt muttered. Kiernan laughed.
They made it through the checkpoint without
difficulty. Once they were in the house, they
veered around the small crowd waiting to check
their coats and went through the dining room. At
the door that led to the kitchen, Matt checked the
crowd casually. When he was confident no one
was paying attention, he held the door open and let
Kiernan enter in front of him.
The large room was bustling with activity. The
caterer had covered every inch of counter space
with trays, plates and glasses. At least a dozen men
in waiter’s uniforms were rushing in and out
through the open back door to a truck parked
nearby. No one spared them a glance. They went
through the door to the back staircase, and Kiernan
led the way up the darkened stairs at a quick pace.
On the second floor they exited the hidden
stairwell cautiously. The sound of the large crowd
below drifted up the main staircase, but the hall
itself appeared deserted. They walked to the
closed door of Abby’s bedroom and entered
silently.
The room had been cleaned. The bed was made,
a small tower of ruffled pillows carefully arranged
in front of the headboard. The powdery residue the
CSI team had left behind had been dusted away.
Every toy was in place, lined up on the shelves
and on top of the toy box with almost military
precision. Well, almost every toy. The unicorn,
Skittles, appeared to be absent, and Matt thought
he probably knew where it was. The realization
was sobering.
Kiernan removed the ball cap and scarf, running
one hand through his hair as he set them aside. The
gesture loosened the gelled strands, leaving them
in artful disarray. Matt unbuttoned his overcoat but
remained near the slightly open door, watching
both Kiernan and the hall.
The room felt deserted even to him, so when
Kiernan shook his head he wasn’t surprised.
“You don’t feel her.”
“Not at the moment.” Kiernan wandered over to
the small vanity with its tiny white chair and ran
his fingers along the back of the seat. “I can try
something. Maybe I can bring her in.”
Matt felt a surge of alarm. “Kiernan,” he
warned.
“Relax, I’ll keep my distance.” Kiernan
extended his hands, holding them above the back of
the delicate chair, fingers spread. He closed his
eyes and angled his head to one side.
“Abby?” he murmured softly. “Abby, honey, we
need to talk to you. It’s important.” He paused.
“Abby, please. Just for a minute.”
Matt felt something, a trembling in the air
around him.
“Abby, it’s safe. I promise. No one can hurt you
anymore.”
The hair at Matt’s nape twitched as
uncomfortable tingling slipped over his shoulders.
Abruptly Kiernan opened his eyes and turned his
head, focusing on the closet door. Open the last
time they’d been there, it was now securely
closed. He went to it, pressing first his hand
against the wood, then his cheek.
“Abby, it’s safe. I promise. I just need to talk to
you for a minute.” Kiernan put his hand on the
doorknob and tried to turn it. It didn’t move, but
Matt doubted there was a lock on the inside of a
child’s closet door.
“Is she—?” he whispered, but he already knew
the answer.
Kiernan’s nod was just a dip of his chin. “Abby,
please.”
There was a wisp of sound, so soft Matt could
almost convince himself he hadn’t heard it. To
him, it didn’t even sound like a word, more of a
rustling.
“I know,” Kiernan said. “I know you’re scared.
But it’s all right, Abby. I swear to you it is. We
won’t let anyone hurt you. But Matt and I need to
talk to you.”
A long silence followed, during which Kiernan
didn’t move from his place against the door. Matt
scarcely
breathed.
He
heard
another
indecipherable sound. Kiernan straightened and
turned his head to stare at Matt in alarm.
“He’s here, Abby?” Kiernan asked, his voice
tightening. “Here in the house?”
Every muscle in Matt’s body tensed.
He felt chilled at the idea the child’s killer
might, at that moment, be inside the house. At the
church, there had been literally hundreds of
people. But the guests currently inside the family
home had been invited, their names on a guest list
provided by her parents. Matt turned to the door
reflexively.
He heard something just outside. Something
tangible, not ephemeral—the sound of a stealthy
step on carpeting. Matt lifted his index finger in
front of his mouth, his eyes sending a warning.
Kiernan nodded even as Matt took a step toward
the bedroom door, and a floorboard beneath his
foot creaked loudly.
There was a rush of furtive steps and Matt
cursed as he threw the door open, bursting out into
the hall just in time to see the door to the servant’s
staircase close.
He didn’t even think. He ran down the hallway
to the stairs, but whoever had been fleeing was
smart. The door was locked. Cursing fluently, he
ran back to the main staircase, passing Abby’s
bedroom door where Kiernan stood.
“Matt?” Kiernan called after him.
Matt didn’t pause to answer. He barreled down
the main staircase, slowing only when he came
within view of the main floor and dozens of
milling guests. He pushed through the crowd,
excusing himself as he went, and finally made it
into the kitchen. Stopping the first waiter he saw,
he gripped his arm hard.
“A man,” he said, trying to control his labored
breathing. “Just came through that door. Did you
see him?”
The wide-eyed server shook his head.
“I did.” Another waiter wearing a bright red
jacket pointed toward the open back door. “He
went out there. Looked to be in a hell of a hurry,
too.”
Without pausing to thank him, Matt rushed
through the door, slipping on the ice in the
driveway. He caught himself on the catering van
and straightened. All he could see were parked
cars and delivery vans. If someone had run out
through the door, they could be anywhere. Dozens
of people had trod on the packed snow, so there
wasn’t even the possibility of footprints.
“Shit,” he hissed under his breath, slamming his
fist on the van’s hood. “Shit, shit!”
Huffing in aggravation, he trudged back into the
kitchen, searching the watchful faces for the young
man who’d spoken up. He was still standing where
Matt left him.
“Did you see what he looked like?”
The waiter hesitated, and Matt reached into his
inside pocket for his shield. He flipped it open and
held it up. “Did you see what he looked like?”
The waiter dampened his lips. “Not really. He
was wearing a long coat like yours, a scarf and a
hat. Like I said, he blew through here. I couldn’t
even tell you what color his hair was. All I really
noticed was his watch.”
Matt frowned. “His watch.”
“Yeah, man,” the young man said almost
reverently. “He was wearing a Rolex.”
“He was going so fast you couldn’t tell what
color his hair was, but you noticed his watch?”
Matt’s eyes narrowed.
His witness colored. “He slipped and had to
grab the counter, so, yeah, I noticed. Besides, it
was a Daytona Oyster Perpetual, dude,” he said, as
if that explained everything. “Black dial with a
stainless steel case and a sapphire crystal. That
watch is worth a cool twelve grand.”
“And you know this how, exactly?” Matt
pressed.
The young man shrugged. “I’ve got a thing for
watches. I might forget what color the guy’s suit
was, but I’d never forget his watch. There just
aren’t that many.”
Matt tucked his shield away and pulled out a
small pad and a pen. “I’m going to need your name
and how to get ahold of you.”
He finished taking the information and realized
Kiernan was standing behind him. Thanking his
witness, his gaze shifted to Kiernan as the waiter
went back to work.
“This is how you stay clear of the
investigation?” Kiernan quipped.
“If I had any intention of staying clear of the
investigation, I’d have never been in that
bedroom.”
“You didn’t catch him, I take it.”
“Didn’t even get a look at him. What about…?”
He gestured toward the upstairs with a jerk of his
head.
Kiernan sighed. “She’s too scared right now.
She vanished when the ruckus started out in the
hall.”
“Crap.”
The caterer and his assistant were standing
close enough to eavesdrop. Shooting Kiernan a
meaningful look, Matt led the way into the hall
outside the crowded dining room.
“Sorry. I was afraid it would go that way, but
I’d hoped…” Kiernan shrugged. “We didn’t get
very much.”
“Not true. We know whoever he was, he was
making every effort to hear what was going on in
Abby’s bedroom while trying not to get caught,
which hardly seems innocent. We also know he
has an expensive goddamned watch. Which leads
me to believe he has money. But most importantly
—” he paused, glancing around before lowering
his voice, “—we know he’s close enough to the
family to have been on the guest list.”
“Unless he snuck in through the back door.”
“He’d have had to get past the guards at the
gate.”
“True.” Kiernan stuck his hands into his coat
pockets, eyes speculative. “So, what now,
Detective?”
Matt looked at the crowd still milling near the
front door. “We bide our time and then figure out
how to get a copy of the list.”
Kiernan followed his gaze, and his expression
became vaguely calculating. “Why don’t you let
me take care of that part?”
Chapter Nine
“Does it always snow this much here?” Kiernan
was leaning forward against his seat belt, watching
the dizzying fall of heavy flakes with fascination.
The lights on the dash threw a faintly bluish tint
over his square jaw and straight nose.
“Not usually, no.” All the work the plows had
done was being undone by the latest snowfall. It
was so heavy he was driving fifteen miles under
the speed limit, and the silence of it, combined
with the almost complete lack of other vehicles on
the road, created an atmosphere of intimacy in the
front of the Bronco. “Usually we get one or two
storms, maybe two feet total. This is very
unusual.”
“It’s kind of cool. I’ve never seen this much
before.”
“Yeah, it’s cool, all right. Until you have to
shovel it.”
Kiernan settled back with a grin. They were
headed to the hotel. Aidan had told him the media
appeared to be so occupied with the funeral they’d
abandoned the Hilton entirely. She was in the
suite, trying to make other arrangements for them to
get out of town. It was apparent the airport
wouldn’t be operational the next day, but the trains
were still running, at least for the time being, so