A Merciful Secret (Mercy Kilpatrick #3)(32)
“No. It looked fine.” If I owned an SUV like that, I wouldn’t loan it to anyone.
Relief crossed Christian’s face.
“I didn’t call for a tow yet,” Truman said. “I’ll leave that to you since you seem to know what happened.”
“I’ll get to the bottom of this, but I’m surprised he’d just abandon it. That’s not like him. I hope he’s okay.”
“He’s a friend?” Truman asked.
“He works for me.”
“No answer,” Rollins said, sliding his phone into his pocket.
Frustration crossed Christian’s face. “Do you mind taking care of the car?” he asked Rollins. “I’ve got an appointment in a few minutes.” Rollins nodded, took a hard look at Truman, and then disappeared down a hallway on the other side of the stairs.
“Rollins works for you too?” Truman hadn’t cared for Rollins’s parting look. It’d warned him to toe the line.
“He does. Thanks for driving out here, Chief Daly. I know I’m out of your way.”
“Do I need to look for your friend?”
Christian frowned. “I’ll call him again later. I’m sure it’s nothing. His car was having issues, so I loaned him mine for a few days. I’ve been distracted since—” The man looked away, swallowing hard.
Truman studied the bloodshot eyes and decided to ask the question that’d been ricocheting through his brain. “Are you related to Malcolm Lake?”
As Christian’s face fell, Truman instantly wished he hadn’t asked. “I’m sorry for your loss. I’d heard about his death, but I wasn’t sure you were related.”
“He was my father . . . and thank you.”
Truman paused, wanting to ask if Christian was aware of the similarity between his father’s death and Olivia Sabin’s. None of my business. His gaze fell on a series of award plaques behind Christian on the wall. Even at this distance, he could see LAKE SKI AND SPORTS engraved in the metal.
“You’re Lake Ski and Sports?” he blurted before thinking.
“Yes.”
The protective actions of Rollins made a little more sense now. Christian Lake was a very, very wealthy man . . . although Truman had been clued into that fact as he drove up to the house. Truman had heard the owner of Lake Ski and Sports was developing a new type of ski that might rock the entire industry, along with several other new sports equipment–related improvements. He’d been hailed as an innovator by the media and condemned as a disrupter by manufacturers because his inventions threatened to make their products obsolete.
Lake was sort of a smaller-scale Bill Gates or Elon Musk of sporting goods.
Truman held out his hand, feeling he’d overstayed his welcome. “I’m sorry about your father.”
“Thank you. I’ll show you out.” He led the way to the front door, giving Truman new mind-boggling views of the home’s elaborate interior. Out front a huge covered porch overlooked the grounds. Even though it was covered in snow, Truman suspected the extensive property was perfectly landscaped. As he went down the steps, a small SUV came up the long drive and parked.
He blinked as Mercy stepped out of the back door on the driver’s side. A dark-haired woman emerged from the passenger’s side, and Eddie slammed the driver’s door, instantly spotting Truman. “Hey, Truman!”
Christian Lake’s appointment was with the FBI.
Truman glanced back at Christian, who now curiously eyed him.
How can I convince them to let me sit in on their interview?
Hiding her pleasure at unexpectedly running into Truman, Mercy introduced him to Ava as they stood in the snow in front of the giant cabin.
“I’ve heard a lot about you,” the Portland FBI agent told him with a wink and warm grin.
Mercy elbowed her. “Stop it.”
Truman’s smile indicated he found Ava amusing.
“What are you doing here?” Mercy asked Truman.
He jerked his head toward a man who waited several yards away on the front porch. Christian Lake. He looked good. Long gone was the geek she’d worked with at the steak house. Now he was movie-star handsome. And rich.
Will he remember me?
“I found an abandoned car,” Truman said. “Turned out to be his, so I came out to let him know about it.”
Eddie eyed the big vehicle in front of the garage. “That old Hummer?”
“No. A Lexus SUV. It’s still on the side of the road.”
“Where is it?”
“Goose Hollow Road.”
The three agents exchanged a glance. “Did he leave it there?” asked Ava. “Was it damaged?”
It was Truman’s turn to frown. “No and no. He said he loaned it to an employee. Why?”
Mercy bit her lip. “We need to know where Christian has been for the last few days. An abandoned vehicle is interesting.”
“I put together that he’s Malcolm Lake’s son. I didn’t ask any questions about his father’s death, but he’s clearly upset about it,” stated Truman. “And besides, the SUV is registered to him. If he thought he was hiding it, he’s not very sharp,” Truman said dryly.
Ava grinned at his comment and a spark of jealousy flared in Mercy’s chest, catching her by surprise. She instantly let it go and enjoyed the signs that two of her favorite people might share the same sense of humor.
Kendra Elliot's Books
- Close to the Bone (Widow's Island #1)
- A Merciful Silence (Mercy Kilpatrick #4)
- A Merciful Death (Mercy Kilpatrick #1)
- A Merciful Death (Mercy Kilpatrick #1)
- Kendra Elliot
- On Her Father's Grave (Rogue River #1)
- Her Grave Secrets (Rogue River #3)
- Dead in Her Tracks (Rogue Winter #2)
- Death and Her Devotion (Rogue Vows #1)
- Hidden (Bone Secrets, #1)