Red Rock Rises; Sexy Romantic Suspense; Book 1: The Red Rock Series (The Red Rock Seies) (24 page)

Eric sighed and reached for the bottle to refill his glass.

“For better or worse, man, not only are you
not
helping, you are part of the problem.”

Dameon reared up. “What the hell are you talking about?!”

“They’re going to use you, Dameon. They’re going to use the fact that you arrested her against her. They’re going to use the fact that Trey was arrested and you have him in a tough probationary program. They’re going to get you to tell them she keeps a shitload of guns in the house with a 15-year-old boy. And finally they’re going to use the fact that her primary client is a man that the APD is convinced is part of the Mexican Mafia.”

Eric lifted his glass to Dameon and added with a sigh, “And then they’re going to go into all that went on in the Army.”

“What went on in the Army?”

“You know this, Dameon. She was special ops, undercover. According to the Army, on most of her missions she was never there. The missions didn’t happen, they were off the books.”

Eric went to his desk and picked up a thick file. He tossed it on the table with a thump, then sunk back down into his chair. He pressed his fingertips between his eyebrows and exhaled deeply.

“Just when I thought it couldn’t get any worse,
these
arrived about an hour ago. Why I was gonna call you. Those conniving well-placed sons of bitches at Lawson and Schemer have come up with pictures of her. Let me tell you—as if you don’t know—Jesse is one hot babe. Especially dressed the way she is in these photos. They’ve blanked out the faces and uniforms of the others so it looks like she is with a group of men enjoying what she is doing. Forget that these photos are as classified as the missions. It doesn’t matter. They exist. And Martin Lawson is going to use them. Before you ask, yes, we could get them declassified but Jesse refuses. I’ve already talked to her. Plus we’d have to convince the judge to delay the hearing. And you know that the Army could take months if not years to declassify what she did.”

Eric opened the folder and passed it to Dameon.

“Jesse hasn’t seen these yet, so
technically
I haven’t been told that I can’t show them to you.”

Dameon rifled through the stack, his anger getting a chokehold on his throat.

“You’re telling me they can use these? For Christ’s sake, Eric! Out of context?”

“Yes, they can and
we
can’t provide the context—at least as far as Jesse and the Army are concerned.”

Dameon was livid. “Even given the fact that it makes it impossible for her to defend herself?!”

“Yes, even so. That’s the rub. Could Jesse petition? Yes, she could. But she would have to go through her commanding officer and she refuses to do that.”

“Why?”

Eric sighed, then stared down at the desk for a moment before meeting his friend’s eyes. “That I can’t tell you, Dameon. Something happened and, yes, I know what occurred. But I can’t tell you, man. I will tell you that I understand why she doesn’t want to go to her superior officer. Moreover, I agree with her.”

“Tell me, Eric. I have to hear it.”

`Eric shook his head and sighed. “I can’t, Dameon.”

“Does it have to do with why she left the Army?”

`“Yes. It does.”

“And it involves her commanding officer?”

Eric nodded. “I can’t say anymore. It truly is attorney client privilege.”

In the silence that followed, Dameon’s heart was racing. He berated himself, furious. Damn, why hadn’t he been more insistent? Why had he agreed to let her handle this alone?

Eric pushed away from the table and strode to the floor-length windows, peering out into the dark night. After a moment, he turned back to Dameon with a quizzical expression.

“You know Dameon, while I can’t tell you, her father might. You need to talk to him, bro. Sean was super impressed with you. I know that Jesse has sworn her father to secrecy but if he understands how serious this is he may be willing to break his promise to her.”

Returning to the conference table, Eric sat down and leaned forward resting on his forearms. His eyes betrayed his concern. Dameon noted that there wasn’t a hint of a smile on his friend’s usually cheerful countenance.

“My honest opinion, Dameon? I need help. If I don’t get
some
way of answering all of the charges these assholes are going to make? At the most Jesse is looking at being with Trey a couple of times a month—in court supervised visits.”

Dameon’s anger had quieted to a simmering, more dangerous rage. He rose to his feet. Leveling a hard glare at Eric, he threw down his marker.

“A few minutes ago, Eric, you said you were the only person standing in the way of Jesse losing Trey. You’re wrong. There are a lot of other people who stand in the way of her losing him—not the least of whom is me.”

Chapter 28

“Hell, yeah! Of course, I’d
love
to have a drink with you, Dameon. Any time you want to come to Georgia, man, let me know. I’ll give you the royal treatment. Where the hell are you now?”

“Third table to the left, in the back corner.”

Sean O’Donnell jumped to his feet and glanced around Paddy’s Lounge, a startled frown marring his brow. When he spotted Dameon in the corner, his frown morphed into a huge grin. His eyes shining with excitement, he barreled across the crowded tavern, shouting before he got there.

“Well, smack my mack! I’ll be damned. What the hell are you doing here, Dameon? And why didn’t you let me know you were coming? Damn, man, I’m heading out of here tomorrow night for a three-month stint in Korea. Fuck, I would’ve hated like hell to ’ave missed you! And, Christ, how did you know where to find me? Don’t tell me this corn patch of a town knows me so well that—”

Sean’s glee stuck in his throat when he caught Dameon’s expression.

“Fuck, Dameon. Is Jesse…? Trey…?”

Dameon shook his head and clasped Sean’s arm pulling him close.

“No, Sean, it’s okay. They’re both… fine.”

He gestured to the chair across from him and waved the barmaid over.

“What are you drinking, Sean?”

“Hell, what I always drink. Wild Turkey.”

Dameon nodded to the waitress. “Bring us a bottle and two glasses.”

Sean settled into his chair, his brows knit in a heavy frown. His words were clipped.

“I’ll give you five seconds to spit out why you’re here, man, then—”

“I need your help, Sean.”

Sean startled then relaxed somewhat. “Oh Christ, what’s that hard-headed daughter of mine done now? Goddammit. I told her if she didn’t give in to how you both feel about each other, you’re not going to be able to get people to sit in the same room with you. Hell’s bell’s the sparks between you two could light a man’s ass on fire.”

Dameon allowed himself to snort in appreciation. He wished it was as uncomplicated as Jesse pushing him away, afraid to get close. He gave a pained smile then shook his head.

“No, Sean. Nothing that simple. I take it you haven’t heard from Jesse?”

“Should I have?”

“Yeah, you should have. But since you didn’t, I’m going to do what your daughter would consider unethical and bring you up to date. Let me put it this way, Sean. While this is obviously about Jesse, it’s also about Trey. You appreciate what I’m doing with your grandson? Well, everything I’ve done is about to be wiped out. It’ll send him down the drain. And take your daughter with it.”

“God. Dammit. Dameon. Spit it out.”

“Garrett filed suit demanding full custody of Trey. He claimed that living with his mother puts Trey in physical danger. The court decided that his claim had enough merit that they expedited the hearing. They also slapped Jesse with a restraining order forbidding her to see or speak to Trey until the hearing.”

Sean was incredulous. “Jesus fucking Christ. When’s the hearing?”

“Monday.” He glanced at his watch confirming that it was past midnight, “Two days from today.”

Sean face contorted with a mix of anger and dismay. “Damn, Wolf. I can’t get out of this mission. Hell, I’m leading it—”

“I’m not asking you to, Sean. But I
am
asking you to help me. Help me understand. The information I’m giving you came from Jesse’s lawyer. Eric Grant is a friend of mine, a fellow Ranger. After holding your sobbing grandson in my arms for thirty minutes, I told Eric he’d be short a critical body part if he didn’t fill me in.”

Dameon paused to give the clearly upset man time to absorb the seriousness of what they were up against.

“I had to go to Eric because since Jesse received the summons, she’s refused to see me or speak to me. She’s completely shut me out. She also warned Eric that if he revealed information to me OR to you, she’d fire him. The fact that Eric is going over her head should tell you we are in a shitload of trouble.”

Dameon gave O’Donnell a quick overview of Garrett’s case and how the lawyers planned to use Dameon and his office to smear Jesse.

“I can handle the things they’re saying about her arrest and Trey’s arrest. After my testimony they’ll be damn sorry they used that tack. But, Sean? I
need
to know why Jesse won’t go to the Army. Why she won’t petition or at the very least get a letter from her commanding officer supporting her. Why did she leave, Sean? Eric said you know. He’s prohibited by attorney client privilege to tell me. You’re not. I’m telling you, if I’m going to be able to help your daughter keep her son, I need to know what happened.”

Sean put his head in his hands and was silent for a long moment. When he looked up at Dameon, the sheer agony raging in the man’s eyes was difficult for Dameon to face.

“Dammit, Wolf. She was always such a superstar. It killed her that she had to leave the way she did. She’s a proud woman, an honorable one. She stands on principle and has a fierce sense of right and wrong. And fuck, the irony is that they practically ran her out all to protect that dishonorable fucking son of a bitch.”

Seeing the strain on Sean’s face, Dameon could only imagine how difficult this was for Sean. Not only was he furious at whatever had happened, but by telling Dameon, he was also breaking a promise to his daughter. Dameon kept his silence, giving the struggling man time to come to grips with his emotional dilemma.

Sean met his eyes and didn’t look away throughout the challenging retelling. “On the surface, it’s a familiar story. Hardly new. At the end of a mission, her commanding officer, Col. Elliott Caldwell, came on to her. He attacked her and tried to rape her. Jesse’s a fighter. What the hell was she supposed to do? Let him rape her? Jesse hit him, hard enough to break his nose and knock out a tooth when she split his lip. Caldwell called in his aide who didn’t see the assault—only the aftermath. Caldwell was enraged. He claimed that Jesse came on to him and when he refused her, she attacked him. He called her a cunt and in front of his aide said that she was a shame to her rank, to her unit and to her country. According to Jesse he said: ‘I’m going to run you of out of this man’s army if it is the last thing I do. The Army is no place for oversexed sluts.’ ”

Sean took a long swallow of his drink and stared vacantly at the wall, his face flushed, his eyes dark with anger. Dameon marveled at the man’s restraint. His own anger was so intense he could barely breathe. His chest felt like an accordion that a demonic musician had squeezed all the air out of and failed to open it to let new air in. He carefully put his glass down on the table. He had the urge to break something, smash it. The glass seemed a more likely target than the half empty bottle of whisky.

Sean brushed at his eyes and continued, his voice vibrating with emotion.

“The Colonel also claimed that she was drunk, which as you know well, is not what my daughter does. If they’d done a sobriety test at the time, it would have shown that the bastard had polished off a bottle of Jameson’s before he attacked her.”

He paused and absentmindedly sipped on his drink. Taking a deep breath, he continued.

“The rest won’t surprise you. Colonel Caldwell put together a case that made Jesse out to be a slut and a sexual predator, a nymphomaniac. Her general, Tom Peters, who happens to be a friend of mine, would have had no choice but to file an Article 38 against her, at minimum an Article 15. You can’t attack your superior officer without consequences. Tom Peters told me privately that with the financial resources that fucker Caldwell had, it was a certainty that Jesse would lose the case. That would mean a loss of rank, pay and a serious blot on her record. Not only that, the fucking media would have a field day. Can you imagine what those vultures would have done with a gorgeous redheaded bombshell as their primary witness? Over time, they’d have crucified her. As you would expect, Jesse blamed herself. Said she never should have gone to his suite. And hell, she shouldn’t have. The deciding factor in her leaving the Army was that she knew that Garrett would grab it and run with it. She’d lose Trey for good.”

Sean closed his eyes but not before Dameon saw the tears collecting in the corners.

“And I’ll be fucked. It looks like she might lose him anyway. Jesus Christ.”

Dameon thought he’d hidden his furious response to Sean’s recital until he saw the older man looking at him with concern.

“I don’t blame you for being angry, Dameon. If I could kill the guy I would. You going to be okay, son?”

Dameon forced himself to respond quietly when what he wanted to do was yell and pound on the table.

“You know, Sean, I also would kill that man if I could. Somehow, some way, I will make him pay for what he did. But I’d be lying if I didn’t say that it kills me that Jesse wasn’t willing to talk to me about any of this.”

He tried to shake off his anger that was about sixty percent hurt. He appealed to her father. “How could she not have known that I would support her? That I would be proud of her? That she did the only thing she could to protect her son?” Dameon struggled against his pain but unable to hide his frustration, he added with a dejected sigh, “But she wouldn’t confide in me. Because she didn’t trust me.”

He turned to the crusty sergeant who was staring at him with a troubled frown. He sought to turn the attention away from himself and Jesse. “Thank you, Sean, for telling me this. I know it was hard for you. I appreciate your faith in me. And, yes, it will make a difference in how we develop the case.”

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