Rise - Part Three (Rise #3)(12)



I do have to focus on the event for Gabriel and if I leave now, I may not have the chance to tell my father about Landon and me. In a perfect world I wouldn't have to do it within a five minute time frame and with a guard breathing heavily nearby but this is what I've been given, so I have to make it work.

The guard points at the clock on the wall before he walks back to his post by the door.

"I need to tell you something," I spit the words out quickly while I press my hands over my eyes. "I'm sorry I have to do this."

I feel his hands grab mine. They're gentle and comforting, just as they've always been. "You can tell me anything, Tess. I will always be your father."

He will. I know that. Nothing can change that fact. If I have to take the train to Boston each week so I can visit him in a prison here, I'll do that.

"I told you I met someone."

"Frederick's son." There's no inflection in his tone at all. I can't gauge whether he's angry or not. "You've been seeing the older boy. He's the one who tried to save his father when the boat capsized."

"Landon," I say his name. "I met him on a flight."

He glances back at the guard. He knows as well as I do that our time together is almost done. "He turned his father into the police, Tess. That boy did the right thing."

I swallow as I consider my reply. I don't need to ask him how he knows. His lawyer told him. He's obligated to share everything with my father. I fumble with my words, wanting to challenge him on his declaration that Landon did the right thing. How is it the right thing if my father is going to be taken back to a jail cell within the next ninety seconds?

I don't have time to say another thing as the guard taps my father's shoulder. "It's time, Otis. We need to go."

"Thank Landon for me." My dad leans forward to kiss the top of my right hand. "Tell him I'm grateful for what he did."





Chapter 12


––––––––

"He'll be released by the end of the week." Everett runs a hand through his dark hair. "I'd have him out sooner but that's when he's scheduled for arraignment."

"How much will the bail be?" I ask even though I can't cover it if it's more than a few hundred dollars.

I'd spoken to my siblings about how we'd raise bail when we all gathered for dinner at my mother's house after I saw my father yesterday. My mother was the first to offer her house as collateral. The silence that enveloped the room after she said that had mirrored what each one of us was feeling. We were shocked. She'd sprung back to life to help our father and when I left to catch the train to come back to New York last night, she had hugged me tightly, telling me that she'd never loved me more.

"No bail." He grins, before he slides open a drawer of his desk.

"No bail?" I parrot back. "Clinton said if they let dad go we'd have to come up with the bail money."

"All of the charges against your father are going to be dropped, Tess," he says softly. "He's going to be a free man."

"How is that possible?" I clench the arms of the chair I'm sitting in. "I spoke to him. He told me about what happened."

"Every shred of evidence against your father was gathered under questionable conditions more than ten years ago." He reaches for a pad of paper. "The state believes that your father's involvement in the crimes committed continued for years but I've produced proof that he contacted his superiors within the company and then stepped down as district manager and took on a job as a sales person in another territory."

I watch his lips as he speaks, trying to decipher exactly what he's saying. "I don't know that I understand."

"There is a statute of limitations for the crimes your father was accused of committing." He jots something down on the notepad. "That time frame has passed. The state asked for an extension, which is laughable. No judge will grant them that. It's unconstitutional."

"What about the missing woman? He told me about her."

"That's interesting." He taps the tip of the pen in his hand against the notepad. "Your father had an airtight alibi for that day. He couldn't have been involved in her disappearance."

"An alibi?" Confusion can't even begin to cover what I'm feeling. If my father had an alibi that would have taken his name off the list of people potentially involved in Lydia's disappearance, he should have produced that immediately.

He slides his suit jacket off before he loosens his tie. "I asked your father if I could share this. He had no qualms either way."

That's my father. He's open and honest to a fault but apparently not when he needed to be. "Where was he the day that Lydia disappeared?"

He rests his elbows on his desk, cocks his head to the left and shifts slightly in his chair. "Your father was in a hotel room near the airport. He was with Gianna Foster."

***

"I'm happy for you, Tess," Landon says with his mouth pressed to my ear.

I want to pull back from the embrace so I can look into his face. I hear the honesty in his words but I know that a small part of him must have questions about my father's release.

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