What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)(98)
“Have the charges against Haley been dropped?” Morgan asked. Eliza and Haley were sharing a room on the third floor of the hospital. Eliza was being treated for smoke inhalation. Haley had several deep cuts on the bottoms of her feet. But they would both recover—physically, anyway. Haley would no doubt have lingering emotional issues.
“Yes.” Esposito nodded. “She is free to go.”
The knot in Morgan’s belly finally unraveled. Haley was not going to prison. Morgan and Lance were all right. Hopefully, Sharp would recover from his wounds.
Morgan would have questions about the case for Esposito in a day or two. But she’d heard enough for now. She couldn’t take in any more information.
“You’re not going to admit that Morgan proved your case wrong?” Lance asked.
Esposito shrugged. “Since we didn’t go to court, no one won or lost. I’ll still get credit for Isaac’s and Justin’s convictions. I’ll let you know if I need any paperwork signed.” Esposito turned and left.
Lance watched him leave. “I guess it’s too much to ask that he acknowledge that you kept another innocent person out of prison when he was happy to railroad her into it.”
“I don’t expect acknowledgment or accolades.” Morgan ate another cookie. “And at least we now know that he’s not evil.”
“No. Not evil. But he’s still an asshole.”
“He went into a burning building with you,” she said in a really? tone.
“I still don’t like him. All he cares about is his reputation, not seeing justice done.” Lance wrapped a hand around the back of his neck. “Speaking of people I don’t like and justice not being served, remind me to have a bonfire with Kieran Hart’s photos tomorrow. I wish there was something we could do to him.”
“He hasn’t broken any laws, just the trust of the women he dated. Think of it this way. Even with all his money, women see through him, and he is still alone.” She offered him a cookie. This time he took one and crunched it down in three bites. “Does that make you feel better?”
“A little.” He reached for another cookie and froze. “Sharp’s waking up.”
Morgan turned to see Sharp’s body shifting ever so slightly on the bed. His eyelids fluttered.
Calling for the nurse, Lance bolted into the room.
Chapter Forty-Six
Sharp cracked an eyelid. Bright light stabbed his eyeballs, and he squeezed his lids shut again. Was he dead? If he was, then the bright light and tunnel weren’t all bullshit.
But if he was dead, why did his stomach feel like someone had parked a train on it?
Maybe he hadn’t gone to heaven.
He squirmed, sending bolts of pain through him that made him think about letting the darkness suck him under again.
A familiar voice broke through the haze of agony. “Sharp.”
He opened his eyes. Everything was blurry. Lance?
He’d intended to say the word, but his throat felt like it was filled with ash, and all that came out was a rasping choke. He blinked until his vision cleared. Lance hovered over him, his blue eyes filled with worry.
“Can he have some water?” Lance asked someone.
A minute later, a straw found his lips, and Sharp sucked a tiny amount of water into his mouth. He held it there and savored it before swallowing. With his mouth moist, he had one question to ask. “Haley?”
“She’s OK.” Lance set the cup and straw on the rolling tray next to the bed. “Eliza too. But Eric didn’t make it.”
Sharp nodded as images of the explosion rushed back at him. He whispered, “Close to the explosion.”
“Isaac shot a hole in the propane tank.”
“Isaac?” Sharp had wondered who had been in league with Justin.
“Isaac, Chase, and Justin were all in on it together.”
Sharp couldn’t wrap his brain around Lance’s revelation. His thoughts were mush. Drugs, probably. He tried to reach for his cup of water, but all he managed to do was make his fingers twitch. Still the movement was enough for pain to slice him in half.
Lance gave him another sip of water. “I’ll give you the details another day. Right now, you look like you need your pain assessed.”
“OK,” Sharp agreed. Breathing shallowly, he waited while the nurse and doctor reviewed his vitals, shined lights into his eyes, and then injected some blessed morphine into his IV line.
He curled his fingers at Lance, who leaned closer. “Haley didn’t imagine those voices. They hacked her game console. Little bastards. Tell her.”
“She knows. Justin confessed.” Lance straightened. Sharp didn’t catch the rest of what he said. He floated away on a comfortably numb sea.
Sharp napped. When he woke in the afternoon, Eliza was in the chair next to his bed, and the pain was only a knife blade through his gut instead of a chain saw. Eliza looked worn-out, but her eyes looked brighter than he’d seen them since she’d first come to his office to ask for his help.
“Haley’s OK?” His voice was not quite as raspy.
Eliza hesitated. “She’s going to be. I won’t lie. She’s going to need some serious therapy after what was done to her, but at least now she knows what happened. She knows she’s not crazy. She didn’t harm anyone. Thank you. For everything.”
Melinda Leigh's Books
- What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)
- What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)
- Bones Don't Lie (Morgan Dane #3)
- Her Last Goodbye (Morgan Dane #2)
- Seconds to Live (Scarlet Falls #3)
- Bones Don't Lie (Morgan Dane #3)
- Melinda Leigh
- Midnight Betrayal (Midnight #3)
- Midnight Exposure (Midnight #1)
- Hour of Need (Scarlet Falls #1)