“He usually sent me to my room.” Her expression darkened, like ink spilled into clear water.
Galen felt his instincts twang.
“Without supper?” Vance asked lightly. Over her head, his worried gaze met Galen’s.
“Huh. At least.” She turned her head into Vance’s chest.
At least? Galen controlled his voice, keeping it even. “How long did he usually leave you there, Sally?”
“Oh, just till the next day.” Despite her efforts to make the words flippant, the strain—and hurt—came through. “I’d get to come down to breakfast.”
And if she’d screwed up at breakfast? “And the longest?”
“Uh. Not much—”
“Be honest, sweetheart,” Vance said, and she stiffened, catching the warning note.
“Three days,” she whispered into Vance’s chest. Her laugh was thin, filled with pain. “If the school hadn’t called to ask why I was absent, I wonder if I’d still be there.”
Why hadn’t someone sent the bastard to hell and gone? Galen’s jaw muscles clenched, hindering his ability to talk.
“How old were you?” Vance was doing better than Galen at keeping the questions coming.
“I think I was twelve. My mother had…” Her mouth pressed into a thin line of pain.
There it is. Like in his favorite childhood game, clues would eventually line up to reveal the crime. Colonel Mustard in the library with the candlestick. He hadn’t planned to ask this so soon, but the opening was there. “Sally, why did your father say you killed your mother?”
Every bit of color drained from her face.
“YOU…” MOM. OH, Mom. Sally couldn’t—couldn’t believe he’d asked such an unspeakable question. Her thoughts fled, disappeared, hollowing her mind into dark emptiness. Like a dog’s choke chain, tightness circled her throat until only strangled wheezing escaped. Unable to even look at the cruel beast who would ask such a thing, she pushed her face against Vance’s chest.
“Answer the question, Sally.” With a determined grip, Vance turned her to face his partner.
No. I won’t.
Galen’s gaze met hers, ensnared hers. The patient expectation in his expression was impossible to ignore. After a moment, he threw her something easier to answer. “How old were you when she died?”
“Eleven.” Saturday afternoon. Her straw-filled hair had been in tangles from playing in the barn with half-grown cats. Her homework had been finished the night before, because she was a geek. Called into the house to answer the phone. Lauren was having a semisurprise birthday party that night and invited Sally. A popular girl had asked her, the chubby nerd, to a party. Her excitement had made her feel like a balloon ready to pop. Then it all went wrong. “And I got a new dress.”
She shut her stupid mouth, knowing it was too late.
Galen’s expression had sharpened. “Why was a new dress a problem?”
“Please, Mom. Please. I’ll do my chores and I’ll clean the barn and…” She’d begged and promised, because she just knew that looking right would let her be one of—maybe not the in crowd—but maybe the normal girls. She wouldn’t still be stuck in with the losers, the really overweight ones, or those on welfare. The ones who had pimples. Or never washed. God, how shallow they’d all been. She’d been. “Father had said no. No more money for clothes.”
“So how did you end up with a new dress?” Vance asked gently.
“Mom drove me into town. It was snowing. Blowing.” Leaving the store, she’d been blinded by her hair whipping around her face. The car shook with the gusts of wind. The snow hitting the windshield sounded like sizzling bacon. A storm turning to a blizzard.
Galen’s intent eyes lit with comprehension. The ancient Greeks loved tragic plays; did his heritage mean he’d understand? “An accident?” he asked softly.
“The bridge was old. There was ice under new snow.” Skidding. She swallowed, her mouth tasting like metal. “The car… The railing broke.” Screaming and falling and screaming. The smash, breaking, shattering sounds, the horrendous impact that could still knock her out of her nightmares. “We went over the side.” So much pain, blood everywhere, like a kicked-over can of red paint. Mom. Mom! Not answering. Shaking her. Screaming and crying and—
“Shhhh.” Vance stroked her hair.
As Sally had finally stroked her mother’s. Soft hair. Pretty. Had Mom felt her attempt at comfort, even in heaven?
“And your father blames you because she died?” Vance asked.
Her voice came out harsh. “Yeah.”
“Because you’d…” Galen’s voice trailed off, an invitation for the rest.
She tried to look away. He caught her chin gently. Firmly. Turned her back. Damn him. “Because I begged. She didn’t want to buy anything, didn’t want to spend the money, and I thought only of myself and made her go to town”—her voice rose—“because I’m selfish and stupid and always wanting stuff.”
Her shouting should have made him back away. Should have made Vance release her instead of holding her tighter.
Galen’s lips turned up, his gaze filled with approval that…that she could actually recognize. “That’s a good baby girl,” he murmured. His mouth touched hers for a second, his lips soft. “Thank you for sharing with me.”
The taste of salt made her realize tears were running down her cheeks.
Vance wiped them away gently. “You’re not selfish. Or stupid. Your father is the stupid one.”
“Exactly.” Galen squeezed her shoulder before rising to walk around the room, his cane forgotten in the corner.
Exhausted, she lay in Vance’s arms and just watched his slow, limping circuits.
Eventually, he came to a stop in front of her. “Homework for you. We’ll expect it tomorrow night.”
Homework? Had she slipped into an alternate universe, one where a crying outburst was followed by school? “Excuse me?”
His lips quirked. “Homework. Use one of your school notebooks. I want an essay about what a parent can reasonably expect from a preteen. Specifics, please. Include quotes from people about whining and begging and adolescent temper. Use the Internet—and document your sources.”
“What?” Her brain wasn’t keeping up, no way, no how.
“There are quite a few parenting sites out there,” Vance said helpfully, obviously on board with the insane scheme. “You might try those first.”
“But I got my mother killed.”
“Baby girl,” Galen said. “You didn’t. You were a typical irritating teenager, wanting something and whining to get it. If we put every teen who displayed that kind of obnoxious behavior in jail, we’d depopulate the world.”
“You’d have to start with my nieces and nephews.” Vance chuckled. “‘I want. I want. I want,’ alternates only with ‘I need. I need. I need.’ Sweetheart, you were a normal young girl. Not someone evil.”
As she looked at Vance and Galen, her eyes filled with tears again, blurring the room’s walls to an underwater montage. Vance made a soft sound and tucked her back under his chin, rocking her slightly.
“I think you’ve had enough, pet,” Galen said. His eyes crinkled. “But do your homework before bedtime tomorrow night, or you’ll be bending over the bed again.”
And suddenly she could again feel how sore her bottom was. Ouchers.
No wonder Kim thought twice before disobeying Master Raoul.
Chapter Nine
After a stop in the kitchen, Vance stepped out the back door, feeling more battered than after a college football practice. The moon was high, illuminating his way across the patio, down the walk to the lake. The muggy night air wrapped around him, making him shake his head. Back in Ohio, he’d still be wearing a sweatshirt.
The lakeshore frog chorus was silenced by the thump of his feet on the wooden dock.
Galen sat in one of the two chairs near the end of the dock, his sore leg propped up on his ancient upside-down canoe. Vance handed his partner his whiskey and dropped into the other weathered chair.
Glock, curled in Galen’s lap, looked up long enough to evaluate a possibly better resting area, but resettled where he was. Galen stroked the furry head before asking, “She asleep?”
As water lapped quietly against the pilings, one courageous frog chanced a croak, soon joined by the rest.
“Out like a light—after another crying fit.” Broke his heart too.
“She had it stored up.” Galen tipped his head back. “Bet her father threw her mother’s death in her face for every request she made. And whenever she displayed an emotion.”
“Not surprising she doesn’t ask for anything now.” Vance tamped down his anger, remembering the hurt in her big eyes. The incomprehension. A person might mature, but the vulnerable child inside would never entirely leave. “She told me her dad hadn’t wanted her. That her mother wanted a child, but he didn’t. Especially not a girl.”
“Hell.”
Not wanted. Actively put down. “Be a pleasure to beat the fuck out of her father.”
“We’ll take turns.” The softness of Galen’s voice didn’t conceal his red-hot anger.
A corner of Vance’s mouth lifted. He happened to like justice. Right and wrong. Protecting and serving. Law enforcement filled a need in him. But in Galen, the need to protect was…more. Deeper. It was that burning drive that had first attracted Vance’s attention. Had made them friends. Sucked that it was now starting to scar his friend’s soul.
However, the desire to beat the hell out of Hart? Sounded healthy enough to Vance.
And watching Sally sass his partner while she was stealing his heart was a true pleasure.
"If only" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "If only". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "If only" друзьям в соцсетях.