banner banner banner
Under Duress
Under Duress
Оценить:
Рейтинг: 0

Полная версия:

Under Duress

скачать книгу бесплатно


Of course. Samantha remembered now. That had been his job before law school. He was a police officer. And now his hesitancy to drive them to the police station as well as his knowledge of evidence became clear, as well. Samantha sagged against her seat. She had forced him into an uncomfortable, even awkward, situation for which he was unprepared because she hadn’t trusted his judgment.

“The force?” Lily leaned against the seat.

“Lily, he means the police force. The police department.” Samantha swiped some hair from her cheek.

“You were a police officer?” Apparently, her charge wasn’t going to let go of this easily. “Did you carry a gun?” Lily strained forward in her curiosity. “Do you have a gun now?”

Reid cleared his throat. “Since we’re all getting hungry—”

Samantha’s stomach clenched, but she couldn’t tell whether it was from hunger or fear. “Wait a minute. You just said you were asked to leave the force. Is that why your old buddy at the station was so quick to say there wasn’t much he could do?”

“No, I don’t think so. There truly isn’t much that can be done. But I was going to make contact after I’d gotten settled in. Pave the way with some buffalo wings. Your predicament just forced me there a little sooner.” He glanced out the window then back to her, a glint of irritation in his eyes. “Do you think I don’t remember anything of my training or my experience as an officer? I tried to tell you that there was nothing that could be done right now, but you didn’t want to believe me.”

“Why should I have trusted you? If I remember correctly, you were asked to leave the school. Something happened. I don’t suppose you’d care to fill me in on that story.”

Reid swallowed hard, his Adam’s apple bobbing up and down. Samantha didn’t care for asking such pointed questions, but her security, and Lily’s, was at stake.

“I used to have a bit of a problem with anger. I was mad at everyone and everything back then. When I started law school, I was still angry with the police department for what I thought they had done to me. Then at the law school it seemed, to me at least, that the professors were grossly unfair. One day near the end of the first year, our torts professor pushed me too hard during one class. I couldn’t come up with the answer to his question in the time he expected, and he started berating me in front of the class.” He paused and fingered the Jeep’s upholstery. “I lost it. I yelled at the professor. Turns out that’s a cardinal sin in graduate education. It’s not something I’m proud of and most of the time I’m pretty good at leaving it where it belongs. In the past.”

In the past. Samantha fought down the urge to touch his hand. After Reid had left the law school, rumors had floated back that he had changed somehow, that another incident had led him to a turning point, but Samantha hadn’t known him well enough to be in the circle of acquaintances who kept up with him. He’d been gone, and it just simply hadn’t concerned her. Now she prayed that those rumors had been true and he had changed for the better. She let herself reach out to touch his arm, a gesture of comfort that ended up comforting her.

“But apparently you finished school. Elsewhere?”

A shadow of something, perhaps an elusive memory from his past, flitted across his face. He slowly drew his attention back to her, as if being summoned from a distant thought. “Yes.”

Samantha waited for more, but apparently a one-word answer was all she was going to get. Either Reid was one of those strong, silent types, or he didn’t want to confess his sins, no matter how good for the soul that was supposed to be.

“What type of law do you practice? You must have a job lined up if you just drove in today. You start on Monday?”

More silence followed by a loud swallowing sound. “Uh, family law is my preference.” He shifted in his seat. “Guardianships, adoptions, maybe a little of wills and trusts. And no job. I’m thinking of starting my own practice.”

Heat crept over Samantha, but at least her inflamed cheeks would be hidden by the late twilight. So that was yet another reason for his evasion.

Invasion. Into her legal territory.

Lily’s face shone in the fast-food joint’s neon lights as thunder rumbled through the Jeep. Of course, there was nothing stopping her from getting out of the vehicle and walking Lily into the restaurant. She could call someone, anyone, from in there and ditch Reid completely. But the thugs were still out there, looking for her and Lily. Despite Reid’s reputation as a defiant rule breaker, he had protected them so far. If she left, then what would she do? Who would protect her?

She tapped her first two fingers against her lips. She would stick with Reid, if he would have her.

“Sam, I am about to keel over from hunger back here.” Lily’s whine filled the Jeep, forcing Samantha to concentrate on the more immediate problem. Hunger. “Just give me some money, and I’ll grab a burger or maybe some chicken tenders. You want anything?”

“Young lady, you are not leaving this vehicle.” Egad, the tone in her voice sounded just like her mother’s. When had that happened? She wanted to be a cool mom. A friend more than a dictator, benevolent or otherwise.

She glanced at Reid, but he only shrugged his shoulders. Thanks a lot.

“Come on, Sam. A ketchup packet? A little thingy of salt?”

“Not here.” She put the Jeep into Reverse and pulled out of the spot. Then she turned it in the opposite direction the black SUV had gone a few minutes before.

Reid didn’t say anything, so she headed up the main street another block and turned into another fast-food burger place.

“Is it safe to go through the drive-through?” She turned her gaze to the rearview mirror, fighting back the urge to rake her hand through her hair.

Reid scanned the streets surrounding the restaurant. “I think it’ll be fine. While we eat, we can figure out what to do next.”

Samantha turned toward the squawk box and ordered two adult meals and a kid’s meal plus a milk shake. The shake would be a treat for Lily, something to keep her mind off their current predicament, and maybe Samantha could get a few sips of chocolate, as well. It wouldn’t be as calming as solid dark chocolate melting on her tongue, but desperate times called for desperate measures.

A few minutes later, they sat in the back of the parking lot, hidden behind the brick Dumpster enclosure, munching burgers and savoring the hot, salty aroma of French fries. Lily rummaged through the colorful sack her meal had come in and extracted the clear plastic bag that contained the prize. She ripped it open and popped a pair of sunglasses with rectangular frames onto her nose.

With darkness encroaching, Samantha could just barely make out the storm clouds that still hovered in the sky. “Lily, it’s too dark for sunglasses. Why don’t you put those away until tomorrow?”

“These aren’t just sunglasses, Sam.” She turned away from them to look out her side window. “There’s a little mirror that lets me see what’s behind me. For spying. Cool, huh?”

Yeah, supercool. Lily would be playing spy now for the next month and a half. Reid was apparently nonplussed as he took another big bite of his hamburger.

Lily giggled. “You have a bit of mayonnaise on your chin, Mr. Palmer. I can see it in my spy mirror.”

“Since we’re getting to know each other so well, you might as well call me Reid.” Reid swiped at his face with a napkin. “And thanks for the heads-up.” He held out his fist, and Lily bumped it with her own.

“No, no. There’s no call for that.” The last thing Samantha needed was for Lily to get chummy with a hothead like Reid Palmer. But would a hothead act like that with a ten-year-old, joking and not caring about mayo on his face? She sipped her drink, the coolness averting her attention from Reid and back to the decisions at hand. “Thank you so much for your assistance, Reid. You’ve been most helpful. Can we go home now?”

FIVE (#ulink_b88ff9f1-a8f4-57fa-8266-3668fdb7835b)

“Home? Not advisable.” Reid opened his backseat door. “And I think I better drive.”

Samantha puffed hair out of her face, but she opened the driver’s-side door and stalked around the front of the Jeep to climb into the front passenger seat. “If we can’t go home, then where?”

“Not only would it be inappropriate to invite you to my place, but I don’t even have a place. There were a couple of leads for apartments to rent from the newspaper I was going to check out this afternoon, but I arrived in town a little later than I wanted, and then an unfortunate accident took over the rest of my day. It’s too late now to go knocking on a stranger’s door.” He pointed a stare at her. “What about your family? Parents? Siblings?”

He had dodged her questions to some extent so far. After all, who wanted to lay out all their sordid past for someone else’s evaluation? He had worked with the officers at HHPD for several years, and they didn’t even know the reason he rarely saw his father or how his mother had died. But with what he remembered and what he had seen tonight of the tenacious Samantha Callahan, he could be sure that if he spent much more time with her, there would be further interrogation.

She tore at a fingernail. “Out of town. Or unavailable.”

He clicked his seat belt into place, the clacking of metal in the catch echoing throughout the silence of the Jeep. Whoever had come up with the statistic that women said twelve thousand words a day compared to men’s five thousand obviously hadn’t met Samantha. Her quietness should have been comfortable for him, yet it was oddly unnerving. He shifted in his seat, seeking a comfortable position. None was to be found.

Perhaps another tactic would elicit some helpful information. “We ought, also, to be thinking of who might be trying to kidnap you and Lily. That could help us put an end to being on the run. Does he want just Lily or both of you?”

“From what I saw at the church and the way he looked at me, I would guess he wants us both. If he wanted just Lily, couldn’t he have grabbed her and stashed her away before I got there?”

“Sounds logical. But that doesn’t necessarily make the situation any better.”

Samantha turned in her seat, a softening shadowing her eyes. “Lily, honey, how’s your arm? Where that guy grabbed you?”

Lily slurped on the shake, drawing out the last few drops. “It’s all right, I guess. No biggie. But I sure don’t want that to happen again.”

“We’re going to do our best to keep it from happening again.”

We? Did that mean Samantha was going to stick around and let him help her? “It seems clear that whoever this is doesn’t want you dead. You said he shot out your back windshield. If he’s any good with a weapon, and we should assume that he is for our own safety, he could have hit either of you. But he didn’t.”

“That was my conclusion, as well.” She paused. “Of course, now we’re here with you, and he may not care about killing you.”

“Yes.” That disturbing thought had worried its way into the forefront of his thinking, and he didn’t care to dwell on that probability.

“Kill you?” Lily asked from the backseat. “Seriously?”

Reid pivoted to meet her wide eyes. “We just need to be careful.” No sense in getting the girl more scared that she probably already was. “Careful is always good.”

“You never did tell me if you had a gun.” That girl was a smarty-pants who didn’t miss a thing.

“Well—” he aimed his attention back to Samantha “—any ideas who could be behind this? You don’t recognize the guy who tried to grab you, so it’s possible he’s a hired thug. Is there any event or relationship from your past or present that could drive someone to this kind of action?”

Samantha pinched her lips, deep in thought. Several moments later, she shook her head. “No idea whatsoever.”

“What about ransom?”

Lily poked her face in between the front seats. “What’s ransom?”

“It means that someone could want to hold you or Samantha as their captive until you or someone pays them a certain amount of money. Usually a large, almost exorbitant, amount.”

“Exorbitant? I like that word, Mr. Palmer. Does it mean an amount that’s really, really big?”

This girl just got better and better. He hadn’t gone through law school learning to question and defend and write briefs without acquiring some appreciation for word choice. “You got it.”

Samantha pointed a stare at him that nearly pushed him out the door. Okay, he got the message. Apparently he wasn’t supposed to get friendly with the kid. “As interesting as your ransom idea is, Reid—” she could have stabbed him with the force of her enunciation “—I just can’t see it. Lily has a trust from her father’s death, but it’s not a large amount by any stretch of the imagination. I have some savings, but nothing significant. There are certainly bigger and wealthier targets. In fact, I shouldn’t even use the word wealthier in that sentence. That implies that I or Lily have some wealth to begin with. It’s funny how so many people think that lawyers are rich. But not all of us are.”

Reid calculated what was in his checking and savings as well as what was in his wallet, and he had to agree. “What about family members who could be forced to pay a ransom amount?”

“My sister and I share the practice, so I know she wouldn’t have much more than me. When my father left my mother, he nearly left her destitute. She wouldn’t have anything to pay.”

Reid swiped his hand through his hair. He could almost hear the ding in his mind as long-forgotten pieces came together. “Wait a minute. What’s your father’s name?”

Samantha narrowed her gaze at him. She had probably figured out where his question was leading. “Thomas Callahan.”

“You mean the Thomas Callahan, one of the most well-known and well-paid divorce attorneys in the Indianapolis area?”

“Unfortunately, yes. It’s not a pretty thing when a prestigious divorce lawyer leaves his own wife.” She pressed her hand to her chest as if the heart palpitations caused by the betrayal were still fresh.

Her expression was so pitiful Reid wanted to slide to the edge of his seat and take her in his arms, and whisper sweet comfort to her. But there was nothing worse he could do at this juncture, for her safety or his. In fact, the sooner this whole situation was resolved and he was removed from Samantha’s presence, the better. He couldn’t risk attachment, not with his history and the statistics to prove his genetic tendencies toward anger.

Before he could respond, Samantha killed that idea. “If these bad guys have done their research, they should know that my father would most likely not pay a ransom. We haven’t spoken much over the years. When we do, it’s rather curt. And we haven’t been in contact at all in over a year.”

“What about Lily? Who in her past would have money to pay a ransom?” Reid glanced at the backseat. Lily wore her spy sunglasses and was stroking her long ponytail, pulling it off to the side as if trying to see it in the mirror in the glasses.

Samantha picked at an invisible piece of lint on her skirt. “When she was only three, her mother died. So it’s been just her and her dad for several years. I got to know her at church and became a sort of substitute mother for her. Her father was killed in a hit-and-run not long ago, but at least he had set up a will that appointed me as her guardian.” She squinted at the dark sky and the clouds hovering outside her window. “Can we talk about this on the way to my condo? Surely we can at least pick up some clothes and necessary items before the rain starts.”

Reid sagged in his seat, his ankle holster pressed into his leg. Perhaps just a few moments to run into her place would be all right. He turned the key in the ignition and checked his rearview mirror.

Lily sat in the middle of the backseat, clutching the purple backpack, a tear escaping from underneath her sunglasses.

* * *

Finally, Samantha was making some progress in her reasoning with Reid. Maybe once they got to her condo and all was well, he would see that she could stay there without problem.

Maybe she would be convinced of that, as well...especially since there was no place else to run.

At her instruction, Reid pulled out of the parking lot and turned right.

“Are you familiar with the Maple Grove Condominiums on the east side of town?”

Reid turned to smile at her. “It’s been a while since I’ve been in Heartwood Hill. Several years. I’ll need directions.”

Even in the dark, Samantha could see a shadow of whiskers beginning to cover his jaw. She swallowed down the lump growing in her throat. She had to admit that Reid was an attractive man, but she couldn’t account for her sudden desire for him to find her home pleasing. When was the last time she had dusted? Had she left dishes in the sink that morning? Did she have enough coffee to offer him a cup?

She pinched her own leg to punish herself for even thinking such thoughts. Someone with Reid’s reputation would never be interested in the coziness and pleasures of home. Nor would she want him there. She and Lily were doing just fine by themselves.

She pointed to the next stoplight. “Turn left up there.”

“So what else can you tell me about Lily’s father?”

“I told you about all I know. The driver was never found, so we don’t know who hit his car. Lily came home with me after seeing her father at the hospital, and she’s been with me ever since.”

“So he didn’t die on impact?”

“No. She got to spend a little bit of time with him. It was good to say that goodbye, but bad to have to say it. You know what I mean?”

“Yeah. I do.”

A catch in his voice touched something deep inside Samantha. Even the tall, strong and quiet Reid Palmer had some difficulty with his background. Samantha checked their location. “In here, at the subdivision sign. I’m in the third house on the left.” Whatever more it was that was bothering him, she couldn’t dwell on that now. Probably never. She had a child to protect, her first priority.

Reid drove slowly, sweeping his gaze over the other houses and down the side streets. “What did her father do? For a living?”

“He was an accountant with that big manufacturing company on the north side of Indy. Why?”

“Just searching for information that might help us figure out who’s after you and Lily.”

Samantha sniffed. “I didn’t know a lot of the details, but accountant sounded like a pretty dreary job to me. I can’t imagine that has anything to do with our present difficulty.”

He idled past the house and turned right at the next street.

“Where are we going? You passed it.”

“I’m circling and double-checking.” He leaned forward and peered past her, in between the houses that backed onto hers. “There was only one car parked on the street, and no one was in it. I think we’re okay.”

Reid pulled up in the driveway and cut the headlights. Lily fidgeted in the backseat but stilled when he held up a hand. “We’ll sit here for a moment and check it out.”

The structure was cloaked in darkness, even more so with the thunder-boomers blotting out the nighttime stars. Samantha sat in the eerie silence and let her gaze dart around the yard. Everything seemed in place. Not a single flower appeared to be trampled, although she couldn’t see all the beds in the dark. “Looks fine to me,” she whispered in Reid’s direction.

“It doesn’t seem that anyone’s around, but it’s hard to tell from the exterior. Let’s go in, but be watchful and stay behind me.” He leaned over the steering wheel and pulled up his pant leg, retrieving the weapon from the holster fastened to his lower leg. “And keep it quiet. Not even a whisper.”