Redemption Road(110)



“Pull yourself together.”

But she couldn’t.

The carousel was turning: Adrian and the kids, Crybaby and the basement. Whom was she kidding when she said life could go back to what it had been?

Herself?

Anyone at all?

When she crossed the city line, she stopped at a strip mall to replace her cell phone. The clerk recognized her face from the papers, but didn’t say anything about it. His finger rose once. His mouth opened and closed.

“I don’t need a smartphone. Cheapest thing you have as long as it calls and texts.”

He set her up with a flip phone made of gray plastic.

“Everything’s the same? Passwords? Voice mail?”

“Yes, ma’am. You’re good to go.”

She signed the receipt, returned to the car, and sat beneath blue sky and a pillar of heat. Punching keys, she called voice mail. Seven were from reporters. Two were from Beckett and six more from Dyer.

The last was from Channing.

Elizabeth played it twice. She heard scraping sounds and breathing, then three words, far and faint but clear.

Wait. Please. Don’t.

It was Channing’s voice. No doubt. Faint as it was, the girl sounded terrified. Elizabeth played it again.

Wait.

Please …

She didn’t hear the third word that time, disconnecting the phone instead and gunning out of the lot. Channing would have bonded out by now—as wealthy as her father was, there could be little question of that—but where would she go?

Elizabeth called Channing’s cell phone and, when she got no answer, steered for the rich side of town. Her father’s house had tall walls, privacy. He’d want to keep her there and buttoned down. Maintain control. Avoid the media.

The last part was a joke. Elizabeth saw the news trucks from two blocks out. It wasn’t the A-list talent—they’d be at the church or the station—but it was a lot of energy, even for a double killing. It was the optics of race and politics, of torture and execution and Daddy’s little girl. No one recognized Elizabeth until she turned for the drive, then the shouting started.

“Detective Black! Detective!”

But, she was through the line before anyone got organized. Fifty feet up the drive she hit private security. Two men. Ex-cops. She recognized them both. Jenkins? Jennings? “I need to see Mr. Shore.”

One of the men approached the car. He was in his sixties; wore a decent suit. A four-inch Smith rode his belt. “Hey, Liz. Jenkins. Remember?”

“Yeah. ’Course.”

He leaned into the window, checked the seats, the floorboards. “I’m glad you’re here. Mr. Shore’s pretty upset.”

“About what?”

“Your timing.”

“That makes no sense.”

“What can I say?” Jenkins keyed the radio, told the house she was coming. “Everything’s a bitch when your kid goes missing.”

“What?”

He stepped back rather than answer the question.

Missing kid?

That couldn’t be good.

“Straight up to the house. Mr. Shore’s waiting for you.”

Elizabeth took her foot off the brake, the drive twisting past statuary and formal gardens. The short distance felt longer. By the time Elizabeth parked, Alsace Shore was on the bottom step. He wore jeans and another expensive golf shirt. Twenty feet out, she could see the flush in his neck. “How dare you wait so long?” He stormed across the cobbled drive. “I called the department three hours ago!”

Elizabeth climbed from the car. “Where’s Channing?”

“You’re supposed to tell me that.” He was coming undone. No question. Behind him, his wife huddled in the open door.

“How about we start at the beginning?”

“I’ve explained this twice, already.”

“Do it again.” His mouth snapped shut because she was cold and hard, and people rarely used that tone with him. Elizabeth didn’t care. “Tell me everything.”

It was difficult for him to do, but he swallowed his pride and told her about the drive from court and the awkwardness between them, about the pink room, the hot chocolate, and the open window. “She’s not thinking right. It’s like she’s a totally different person.”

“I think she is.”

“Don’t be flip.”

“She’s snuck out before,” Elizabeth said.

“Yes, but not like this.”

“Explain.”

He struggled, and other emotions broke through. “She was in a dark place, Detective. Resigned. Untouchable. It was as if she’d given up on everything she’d ever been.”

“She’s in shock. Are you surprised?”

“Jail, I suppose. The threat of prison.”

“It’s not just jail, Mr. Shore. I warned you about this before. She was abused until she broke, then killed two men in defense of her own life. Did you think to tell her you understood? That maybe you’d have done the same thing?”

He frowned, and she knew he had not. “You’ve seen the photographs?”

“I don’t need to see them, Mr. Shore. I was there. I lived it.”

“Of, course. I’m sorry. This day…”

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