“Again, you mean,” Thomas clarified over the sound of a huge truck passing on the street outside, then stopping in a hiss of brakes. “You want us to prove it again.”
“Right.” The lieutenant nodded. “And yeah, he can’t be convicted for the same crime, but at least he did twenty years of his sentence and the department will look good, like we covered all our bases.”
Thomas said, “Or our asses, as you said.” Again noise from the street, this time the steady beep of a large vehicle backing up.
“And that’s the goal? Appearances?” Johnson asked just as the exterior noise quieted again.
“One of many.” Gleason managed a cold grin. “Jonas McIntyre, he’s got a legion of fans, y’know. And they’re vocal.” Gleason’s lips twisted as if he thought what he was assigning was the biggest waste of time on the planet. “And more importantly, they vote. Both the sheriff and the DA are up for reelection next year, so we do what we have to.” With a sigh he leaned back so far in his chair that it groaned in protest. “This doesn’t mean we let up on the rest of the work. God, no. We just add this on, because it’s flashy. It makes headlines, but the other cases, they can’t be ignored. The good news is that right now, things are quiet, right? Not a lot going on? No homicides since Labor Day, right? And there haven’t been all that many assaults.” He lifted his broad shoulders in a shrug. “But the bad news? The holidays are right around the corner, and that means families and friends get together, have drinks, celebrate, all that good cheer, right? And it always turns out that suicides and homicides take a little bump. Stress of the holidays, or whatever.” He glanced out the window to the slate-colored sky beyond. “The upshot is, this just means we all get to work harder. So”—he flashed a humorless smile—“Merry Christmas.”
*
The attorney wasn’t picking up.
Her texts—eight of them counting those she’d written yesterday after she’d heard Jonas had been released—remained unanswered.
She drove to the redbrick building that housed his office. The parking lot hadn’t been plowed, so she parked across the street, then punched in Merritt Margrove’s number for the third time this morning. She was immediately shuffled to voice mail. Again.
“Fine,” she muttered, even though it wasn’t. Nothing was.
She flung open the Jeep’s door, waited until traffic had cleared a bit and dashed across the street, her boots slipping slightly as she stepped into a puddle of slush at the far curb.
Though she knew it was an effort in futility, Kara tried the door. Locked. She rapped loudly beneath a tattered awning, but no one, not anyone in the few rented offices or a maintenance man, appeared. All remained quiet and dark within. The building was obviously only partially occupied, a huge FOR LEASE sign posted in the window confirming what she already guessed. She rapped loudly again, then saw a bell and pushed the button, but nothing happened and she suspected the doorbell didn’t work.
Nor did anyone in the building apparently.
All going to seed.
Like her lawyer, she thought, shivering.
Whereas Margrove had once been a famous attorney, nationally known, he’d slipped into near obscurity, his fortunes either gambled or otherwise wasted away, his B-and C-list celebrity friends having long disappeared into the woodwork, like so many cockroaches scuttling away from the light. After his failure to save Jonas McIntyre from a guilty verdict, Margrove’s fortunes had spiraled downward in a series of bad marriages and worse investments, his flamboyant lifestyle catching up with him, to the point he’d become a shell of his former self, a small-town lawyer scrabbling for clients.
“Sad,” she said aloud, but Margrove wasn’t the only victim of misfortune after the murders of her family. Just one more piece of roadkill on the highway of bad karma that had been the aftermath of the McIntyre Massacre.
Kara didn’t want to dwell on that now; didn’t see that it would do any good. Camping out here and waiting made no sense, so she returned to her car and fired the engine. What now? Drumming her fingers on the steering wheel, she glanced in the rearview mirror and caught her reflection: pale, eyes still red, brown hair lifeless and untamed.
She cut a quick U-turn when traffic allowed and after grabbing a large coffee from a kiosk near a local shopping center, she pulled into a slot near the north end and waited. It didn’t take long. At ten minutes to nine she spied Celeste, Merritt’s wife, pull up in an older black Corvette. Celeste climbed out, a huge coral-colored bag slung over one shoulder, her platinum hair streaked with pink and piled on her head, her body trim and taut in a short coat, black leggings, and over-the-knee boots. After locking the car remotely, balancing keys and phone in one hand and a large collapsible water bottle in the other, she made her way to the door of Allure Salon and let herself in.