Authors: Linda Lael Miller
Nothing. By now, Nick had his ticket. He was onboard the glory train.
I swallowed painfully.
“Honey, can you tell me what you want?”
Her eyes pleaded with me, but she didn't make a sound.
I watched as she faded slowly away.
And then I sat there, beside the road, shaking.
When I felt I could drive again, I drove to the nearest phone.
It was outside a convenience store, and I wondered distractedly if this was the place where Greer had almost been forced into a madman's van.
I fumbled for change, dropped it, gathered it and tried again.
Tucker answered on the second ring. “Darroch,” he said.
I started to cry.
“Mojo?”
I sniffled. Got control of myself. “Tucker,” I said, “Gillian's dead.”
“I know,” he answered, his voice hard with anguish and disbelief. “We just found her body half an hour ago. In a ditch alongside a desert road.” Pause. “Which begs the questionâhow did
you
know?”
“I saw her.”
“The way you âsaw' your ex-husband?”
I sobbed. “Yes.” If he didn't believe me, I didn't know what I was going to do. The burden was too big to carry by myself, and the image of that poor, frightened child, in her ruined ballet clothes and missing a slipper, was seared into my brain, probably for all time and eternity.
“Her stepfather was arrested twenty minutes ago,” Tucker said, his voice toneless.
I felt a tug at my arm and looked down.
Gillian stood beside me, a tiny ghost ballerina, her eyes huge with sorrow.
“Did your stepfather do this to you?” I asked.
Slowly, somberly, she shook her head from side to side.
A woman walked by, staring at me. I could understand her horrified interest; she couldn't see Gillian, so from her perspective, I was talking to nobody.
“Tucker,” I squeaked.
“What?”
“You've got the wrong man. Gillian says her stepfather wasn't the one toâto hurt her.” I swallowed hard. I hadn't chosen this new path or talent or curse or whatever the hell it was;
it
had chosen
me.
And whether I liked it or not, whether
Tucker
liked it or not, I was involved. I knew I couldn't turn my back on a child who needed me, dead or alive.
I had a visual of Tucker running splayed fingers through his hair. “She's actually
there
? Right now?”
“Right here, right now,” I said.
Gillian's eyes filled with tears.
Tucker thrust out a sigh. “Listen, Moje, I know you mean well, but you can't be part of this. You're notâofficial. You don't have a badge
or
a P.I.'s license.”
I held out a hand, and Gillian took it. Her grasp felt small and solid and stone-cold. “No,” I said, “but I have a heart.”
He swore under his breath. “You're not going to back down, are you?”
I squeezed Gillian's hand. “No,” I repeated.
I'd just stumbled into my next case.
ISBN: 978-1-4268-1080-0
DEADLY GAMBLE
Copyright © 2006 by Linda Lael Miller
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