Vulnerable (Morgans of Nashville) (4 page)

Amber sat a little straighter, raising her gaze to his. She hesitated as if sizing him up. “And?”
“And nothing,” he said. “I didn’t work your case and I’m retired now. I’ll leave the figuring to Georgia. She’s smarter than me by a long shot.”
Georgia understood what he was doing. Buddy used to say KC was dumb like a fox. Could make anyone relax. Open up. Tell secrets they never imagined they’d reveal.
Amber reached for her soda and took a sip. “Good. I want this case solved. I’m at your service.”
KC scratched behind his ear. “I know you do. Good luck.”
Amber picked up a fry but didn’t bite it. “I searched you on the Internet after you called me. I wanted to know if you were legit and not some reporter trying to railroad me.”
Georgia’s name would have popped up more than a few times in association with Annie’s murder case. “You get a lot of calls from reporters?”
“I did at the one-year anniversary and then the second. Now that the fifth year is coming up I was expecting more calls.”
“Anything threatening?”
She reached for her phone and scrolled through her texts. She read, “ ‘Time you repent, liar. If you thought you escaped, then you are wrong. God knows what you did!’”
“That from the same person?”
“Yeah. But there will be others. I don’t know how they find my number but they do.”
“Have you had the number traced?”
Amber raised her chin a notch as if this was a normal problem she could handle. “I did a reverse search on the number but nothing came up.”
“Has anyone approached you?”
“No. But the change of hair throws most people off. I’ve not been recognized in person for a couple of years.”
“What do you do in Dallas?”
“I’m an account manager in an advertising company. It’s entry level, but it’s a good job. And the pay is decent.”
Everything she said fit.
“I’m glad you’re back. Maybe you being here will help solve what happened to Bethany and Mike.”
Amber nodded. “Have you contacted Dalton Marlowe yet?”
“He’s spoken to the chief of homicide several times, but he and I haven’t formally met. I’m sure that will change. He’s pressing to see this case solved.” Dalton Marlowe was clearly a man accustomed to getting everything he wanted.
“You understand if you fail, he’ll do his best to ruin your career.”
There were veiled threats according to Deke, but like her brother, she didn’t scare so easily when it came to the job. “I’m not planning on failing.”
Amber’s mood darkened. “Good.”
The two ate in silence for a moment before Georgia set her napkin by her plate. She had noticed the dark circles under Amber’s eyes. “Do you have a place to stay?”
“I’m in a motel now. When the money runs low, I’ll hit my mother up for a place to stay.”
“And you have a car?”
“Yes. Don’t worry about me. I can take care of myself.” Amber balled up her napkin and tossed it beside the half-eaten plate of food.
“I’d like to talk to you again soon. Amber, I’m assuming the cell number I called is still your number.”
“It is. And yes. Call me. I’ll be here a couple of days. I need to see my mom before I head back to Dallas.”
“I’ll call you tomorrow.”
Amber’s gaze met Georgia’s and held it. “I’ll help in any way I can.”
“Thanks. I’m counting on it.” She rose as Amber inched out of the booth and stood.
“Thanks for opening this up again. It’s time for closure.”
“Definitely.” Georgia followed Amber to the front door. “Where are you parked?”
“Right out front. I’ll be fine.”
She stood at the door, watching the woman move down the street and into a mid-sized dark car. When the headlights came on and she pulled out into traffic, Georgia stood there for a long moment watching her drive off.
Earlier fatigue evaporated only to be replaced by a buzzing energy. She moved back to the booth and was greeted by her own half-eaten plate of food.
“Go home,” KC said, placing a takeout container on the table.
She looked up, realizing Rudy’s had nearly cleared out. “Right.”
“You okay?” KC slid into the booth across from her.
“Sure. I’m fine. Amber Ryder is an enigma.”
He rested hands on the table. “She’s prettier than I remembered.”
“She reminds me a little of Annie. Independent. Alone. Living on her terms.”
His voice had a gruff sound as if somewhere along the way the tones had been chewed up in a meat grinder. “She’s pretty like Annie. But she’s not Annie.”
“Oh, I know. I’m not harboring any mommy issues.”
He grunted. “She’s matured. One hell of an attractive woman.”
A smile teased the edges of her lips. “Well, look at you ogling a twenty-something.”
He smoothed a weathered hand over his bald head. “Just an observation. Bishop know you called her?”
Laughing, she drained the last of her soda watered down from the melting ice. “Didn’t realize I needed his permission.”
A smile tugged at the edges of his lips. “I thought you were a team.”
She shifted, tamping down the irritation that Bishop’s name always stirred. “Not a team. Coworkers with a shared goal.”
KC boxed up the leftovers of her meal and pushed the carton toward her. “Buddy said Amber’s amnesia was convenient as hell. He said if you were gonna go into the woods looking for trouble and found it, then a good dose of not-remembering might be the only plausible excuse given the grade-three concussion. But the boys in missing persons could never trip her up. And with no bodies, homicide didn’t participate much in the investigation.”
“She said she’s glad I’m investigating. Wants me to set the record straight. Wants a clean slate.”
His Hawaiian shirt pulled tight against his small paunch as he shifted. “Maybe.”
“She’s not stupid. She said she still gets threatening texts around the anniversary.”
“Not surprising. Lots of crazies in the world.”
“Fair enough.”
“My one piece of advice: Don’t count out Bishop. He’s a top cop.”
“You should have seen the smug grin on his face when he delivered me the case files.”
“There must have been a mountain of files.”
“Twenty boxes, packed tight.” Each time she considered the task of quitting, she thought about Bishop’s smug grin. She’d be damned before admitting defeat.
He pointed a stubby finger at her. “Go home and sleep.”
She dug a twenty dollar bill out of her pocket and tossed it on the table. “Right. Home. Sleep.”
* * *
Amber parked her car in front of the one-story ranch home in the east end of Nashville. The house was covered in white siding that had long ago grayed and dulled. A broken shutter on the right side clung to the house by one nail and the front porch light dangled, waving back and forth in the slight breeze. The weekly trash was curbside and the dented silver cans overflowed with pizza boxes, Chinese carryout, and empty bottles of rose wine. Her mother, Tracy Ryder, no, Tracy McDaniel now, had done little to fix up the property. How many times had she promised to hire help and see that the place was cleaned up and presentable? How many times had she sworn to lay off the booze? . . .
None of that mattered right now. What mattered was that Amber was in a bind and she needed Tracy’s help. Not for the long term, but for the next day or two.
A woman’s figure passed in front of the sheer curtains of the front room. Amber recognized her mother’s walk, noting she gained a little weight in the last five years. Tracy had always sported a hot figure that had landed her not only Amber’s dad, but two husbands before Amber graduated high school. Despite the few extra pounds, Tracy still had the moves to find herself a new man and a new meal ticket.
Sooner or later, she’d have to knock on that front door and let Tracy know she was back in town. Tracy could be a real problem if she didn’t handle her right, but Amber wasn’t worried. She would manage Tracy just as she had since elementary school.
Amber didn’t have the energy tonight to deal with Tracy. She would stay in the motel a few more days. The last few days had been hectic and talking to Georgia drained her more than she expected. She needed a good drama-free place to sleep. She needed to keep her brain sharp. To think. There was too much at stake now for her to make any kind of mistake. Her phone buzzed, signaling a text. She fished it out of her purse and looked at the display.
You will soon burn in hell.
C
HAPTER
T
WO
Monday, October 2, 10:00 A.M.
 
H
omicide Detective Jake Bishop smiled at the determined clip-clop of Georgia’s feet moving down the uncarpeted hallway of the homicide department. She always moved as if the demons of hell nipped at her feet. Never relaxed. Never smiling. Buttoned up tight. She was a live wire of determination, drive, and shouldering a need to prove herself.
Today they were scheduled to brief Deke on the Marlowe/Reed case; otherwise, Jake would have taken the day off. The last three days he and his partner, Rick Morgan, had been chasing down a killer who shot two men in east Nashville. It took days to interview witnesses and piece together the fragments of the men’s lives. Both, it turned out, were meth dealers unworried about cutting into the business of a rival group. They found the shooter last night shortly after midnight sleeping in the back room of a pool hall. The arrest was textbook and by four a.m. the man was processed and in jail awaiting arraignment. Rick, running on empty, went home for sleep and time alone with his new wife, Jenna, a former Baltimore police officer who was a trained forensic artist. She now freelanced her forensic drawing and sculpting skills to several jurisdictions in the region. Once a missing child herself, she specialized in missing children cases and often charged a very minimal fee to cover expenses. In her spare time, she painted portraits thanks to a growing reputation.
Jake should have packed it in for the day but didn’t want to miss the fireworks sure to follow Georgia, who now rushed past his open door toward Deke. Finding his office empty, she emerged frustrated and ducked into Rick’s office.
He always liked the way Georgia pinned her red hair up on her head and how the curls wriggled free to form a collection of ringlets at the base of her neck. On a humid day, her hair went into all-out rebellion, as much as the sprinkle of freckles across the bridge of her nose did every time she tried to cover them with makeup. Her neatly tucked shirt tugged at her narrowing waistband as if it also hated being constrained. Every aspect of the woman was in full battle mode.
However, she was always cool, all business, and kept him at arm’s distance. That had once suited him fine. There were plenty of women to warm his bed other than her. But six months ago that all changed. He was in Rudy’s grabbing a beer when Georgia took center stage. The red curls tumbled around her shoulders and she traded the blue button-down shirt, khakis, and steel-toed boots for a sleek silk top with a V-neck that dipped between her breasts, designer jeans hugging her round hips, and rhinestone studded boots. He took special notice of her as would any man with a pulse in the bar.
KC had leaned forward. “You like? Wait until she sings.”
“She can’t be that good.” He sipped, cold beer sliding over a parched throat.
“She’s gonna rock your world.”
And she had. He was never so transfixed as he was when Georgia cradled that microphone in her long fingers and sang Faith Hill’s “Breathe.” Shit. He still got hard when he thought about the moment.
“Deke went to get coffee,” Jake called out to Georgia.
Seconds passed and then she stood in his doorway careful not to cross the threshold. “We have a meeting at ten.”
He tapped his watch. “Can’t wait.”
She folded her arms. “You read any of the files?”
“Not many. But I’ll get up to speed quickly. Besides,” he said grinning and leaning back in his chair, “you’ll give me the Cliff Notes, right?”
She closed her eyes for a moment, shaking her head. Before she formed a response, Deke’s voice sounded in the hall. Without a word, she turned and vanished into Deke’s office.
Figuring this was the meeting on the Marlowe/Reed case, he rose from his desk, straightened his jacket, and ambled toward Deke’s office. As he grew closer, he heard Georgia’s clipped words sharpening each consonant. She sounded ready to boil over.
“She tracked me down at
Rudy’s
.” Georgia held a rolled-up stack of papers in her left hand. “Someone here told her I was at Rudy’s. Not cool to give out information like that. How do I know someone is not going to cap my ass while I’m onstage with a bright spotlight in my eyes.”
“Do you have a name?”
“I tried to ferret it out but no one is talking . . . yet.”
“Okay. I’ll see what I can find out. What did Amber say?”
Jake leaned on the door frame. “Amber Ryder?”
“She tracked me down at Rudy’s last night.”
“How did she know to look for you?” Jake asked.
“I called her a while ago.”
“And you didn’t think to tell me?” Slight annoyance flared. “We’re partners on the case, right?”
She sat in one of the two seats angled in front of Deke’s desk. “There wasn’t much to tell until now, and now I’m telling you all I know.”
Instead of sitting, Jake remained standing, feet slightly braced. Her little end run clipped the edges of his good humor. He cut his teeth as a cop on the streets of South Boston before he picked up stakes and moved to Nashville seven years ago. He had learned a few things about Southern niceties and could even employ them when it suited, but when angered, the boy from Southie with the hot temper came out swinging. “Going forward, we work the case as a team. No exceptions.”
Blue eyes sharpened. “Sure.”
Deke leaned back in his chair. He was tall with broad shoulders that filled the white starched dress shirt with sleeves rolled up to his forearms. A carbon copy of his old man, Jake still found himself doing a double take when he saw Deke glower as well as the old man. Deke had headed homicide for two years and recently married local defense attorney Rachel Wainwright, who was as bullish on defense as he was prosecution. There’d been a few side bets on how long the two would last.
Unlike Georgia, Deke and his brothers, Rick and Alex, had jet black hair. Deke’s had turned more salt and pepper in the last year. He jokingly blamed the gray on his new wife whom he adored.
Deke studied Georgia as he always did—a bit perplexed and annoyed. “Georgia, tell us what she said.”
“Like I said, I called her a few weeks ago. I was halfway through the files and took a chance I could quickly catch up with her. She didn’t answer.”
Deke tapped an index finger on the arm of his chair as he leaned back. “Two missing kids, one found. As you both realize, Dalton Marlowe wants closure and no more delays. It’s going to take cooperation to make that happen.”
Neither answered, but neither argued with Deke.
“It was a hell of a case,” Jake said. “All hands on deck. I’ve never seen so many man hours dumped into one case.”
Georgia wasn’t exactly frowning but no smile was in sight either. “We all volunteered for search crews.”
“I wish I had a nickel for all the times I walked through Percy Warner Park,” he said. “It was fall and one of the warmest on record. We never found a trace of the two other kids.”
She folded her arms, openly regarding him. “Did you ever interview Amber during the case? You weren’t mentioned in the files.”
“I was present while she was interviewed once. She was adamant that she didn’t remember what happened in the woods. Her story never varied.”
“And you believe her?”
“It was all a little too convenient for me. However, she passed the polygraph test and the body language experts all cleared her. Even the docs said her concussion caused by the fall could have created the amnesia. But I never could swallow it.”
“Why?” Georgia challenged. “That’s a lot of science backing her up.”
That was a trait he liked. She never took anything at face value. She was always pushing, prodding, wanting more until she found the truth. “Never could give you a solid reason.”
“Gut instinct?” Her gaze danced just a little with humor.
“Yeah, Dr. Science. My gut. I couldn’t boil it down to anything that could be proven in a court of law but the twitch I get around liars was there.” Many a cop relied on instinct and the intangibles when they interviewed suspects. Sensing what not to ask was just as important.
Eyes narrowing, a sign she was processing, she turned back to her brother. “As we all agreed, I also pulled the clothes Amber wore at the time of the fall. I reexamined the items a few days ago and collected more samples including hair fibers and a stain. I’ve sent it all off to the state lab for retesting. No answers yet, but could you lean on the lab?”
Deke shook his head. “You sound like Rachel. She’s always pushing for faster, more detailed DNA testing. The lab crews hate the sound of my voice.”
She unrolled the papers she was clutching and tried to flatten them out, but they rolled back up as if they too didn’t want to take orders. “But they do listen to you.”
Deke’s newly minted wedding band glinted in the light as he twirled it on his finger. “What do you think you’ll find this time?”
“I don’t know. But the testing is a little more fine-tuned than even five years ago.”
Jake ran his fingers down his Brooks Brother tie, absently making sure it was straight. “They find data now that’s so specific, the lab techs don’t even know what it means.”
Deke’s scowl deepened, accentuating the lines around his mouth and his eyes.
“You better than anyone, Detective Bishop, understand the value of fresh eyes,” he said. “This case is worth a second look. And with Amber now back in town, we might have a shot at solving it.”
“That case got thousands of looks five years ago. But Dalton Marlowe has political juice and it’s coming to a head.” Jake didn’t like being boxed into a corner but he understood better than anyone the power of a grieving overprotective parent with influence. “Five years. Tests change. People change their stories. It’s still worth a look.”
“How much time have you invested in the case files so far, Georgia?” Deke asked.
“Eighty hours,” she said. “All my spare time in the last few weeks. The sooner I get any test results back on DNA, the sooner I can develop new leads. I’m not on anyone’s priority list so it will take months.”
Deke’s chair squeaked as he leaned forward. “You’re preaching to the choir. I’ll rattle the cages.”
“Thanks.” Her grin was sweet and friendly and Jake guessed she used that same smile a thousand times since she was a tiny girl. She was expert at wrapping her big brothers around her little finger.
“That case was full of dead ends.” Jake liked the smile, but refused to be manipulated by it.
“Don’t you want to know what happened to those kids?” Georgia’s voice rose an octave.
“Sure. And I’ll give the case one hundred percent. But the search and investigation back in the day was pretty damn extensive.” Truth was he liked the idea of giving this case a second look. Two kids remained missing. His argument now was based solely on pissing Georgia off. He could dish out as well as he took from her.
“It’s a start,” she said.
“Retesting forensic evidence is a small but integral piece of the puzzle. Most cases are solved by a detective’s legwork.” Jake shook his head. “If this case is cracked, it’ll be because someone is now willing to talk.”
She was too professional to roll her eyes, but for him, she did anyway with a shit-eating smirk.
Jake shook his head as he looked directly at her. “You, Georgia, aren’t always nice to people. You’re about as subtle as a crowbar.”
A nod of acknowledgment lobbed his way. “I’m nice to some people.”
Deke laughed, but quickly caught himself and sobered his expression. “Your heart is in the right place, but you can be so direct that you put people off.”
She glared as if daring his smile to reappear. “I can’t help it if they have thin skins.”
Jake shook his head. “I’ll do the talking.”
“Bishop’s right, Georgia,” Deke said before she could rebut. “You’ll have to do more than read case files and retest DNA. Bishop excels at the interviews. Did you make a witness list while you were reading the case files?”
As much as she wanted to work this case alone she was smart enough to realize it would take them both. “I did. I also have a ten-page synopsis.”
“Perfect.” Deke rose. “You two work out the details and make something happen. Now get out of my office.”
In the hallway, she drew in a steadying breath. “How can you interview people if you haven’t read the files?”
“Get me your list and the synopsis and I’ll be up to speed enough to get the ball rolling.”
“You and Rick went nonstop for the last three days. Don’t you need a day off?”
Hearing a challenge, his white teeth bared into a mirthless smile. “I always have some gas in the tank.”
Her eyes sparked as if a thousand arguments crowded her mind, but she silenced them, fearing releasing one would toss the lid off Pandora’s box. “Sure.”
“Sounds like a plan,” Bishop said, clapping his hands together.
Georgia’s frown deepened, but she didn’t complain. To her credit, she put the case before her feelings. She forced a smile, but it reminded him of someone who’d bitten into a lemon. “Detective Bishop.”
Jake watched her walk down the hall, tapping the roll of papers on her side. His gaze skittered briefly over her lovely backside that made regulation khakis look good before returning to Deke’s office.
“Top of my interview list is Amber Ryder,” he said from Deke’s doorway. “Interesting that she showed up instead of calling Georgia. From what I remember, she swore she’d never return to Nashville.”
“Yeah, talk to Amber, but take Georgia with you. She’s damn good at what she does, and I trust her instincts.”
“Between the two of us we just might solve this one.”
“I’m counting on it.”
Jake left Deke’s office and made his way down to the forensic offices where he found Georgia inventorying and restocking a crime scene kit. “Hey, partner.”

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