“You attend the wedding?”
“No. Didn’t even hear about it until it was all over. I think I noticed Tessa was suddenly wearing a ring. When I asked, she said they’d gotten married. I was a little startled, thought it was kind of quick, and okay, maybe I was surprised they didn’t invite me, but…” Lyons shrugged. “It’s not like we were that close or I was that involved.”
It seemed important for him to establish the point. He wasn’t
“Tessa ever talk about the marriage?” D.D. asked.
“Not to me.”
“So to others?”
“I can only speak for myself.”
“And you’re not even doing that,” D.D. stated bluntly.
“Hey. I’m trying to tell you the truth. I don’t spend my Sundays dining at Brian and Tessa’s house or having them over to my place after church. We’re friends, sure. But, we got our own lives. Hell, Brian wasn’t even in town half the year.”
“So,” D.D. said slowly. “Your hockey buddy Brian Darby ships out half the year, leaving behind a fellow trooper to juggle the house, the yard, and a small child, all by herself, and you just go your own way. Have your own life, don’t need to get bogged down with theirs?”
Trooper Lyons flushed. He looked at his Coke, his square jaw noticeably clenched.
Good-looking guy, D.D. thought, in a ruddy face sort of way. Which made her wonder: Did Brian Darby start bulking up because his wife carried a gun? Or because his wife started calling a hunky fellow trooper for help around the house?
“I might have fixed the lawn mower,” Lyons muttered.
D.D. and Bobby waited.
“Kitchen faucet leaked. Took a look at that, but out of my league, so I gave her the name of a good plumber.”
“Where were you last night?” Bobby asked quietly.
“Patrolling!” Lyons looked up sharply. “For chrissake, I haven’t been home since eleven last night. I got three kids of my own, you know, and if you don’t think I’m not picturing them every time Sophie’s photo flashes across the news… Shit. Sophie’s just a kid! I still remember her rolling down the hill in my backyard. Then last year, climbing the old oak. Not even my eight-year-old son could catch up with her. She’s half monkey, that one. And that smile, and ah… Dammit.”
Trooper Lyons covered his face with his hand. He appeared unable to speak, so Bobby and D.D. gave him a moment.
When he finally got himself together, he lowered his hand, grimacing. “You know what we called Brian?” he said abruptly. “His nickname on the hockey team?”
“No.”
“Mr. Sensitive. The man’s favorite movie is
“You and Brian still play hockey together?” Bobby asked.
“Not so much. My schedule changed; I work most Friday nights.”
“Brian looks bigger now than when he got married. Like he’s bulked up.”
“I think he joined a gym, something like that. He talked about lifting weights.”
“You ever work out with him?”
Lyons shook his head.
D.D.’s pager went off. She glanced at the display, saw it was the crime-scene lab and excused herself. When she left the conference room, Bobby was grilling Trooper Lyons on Brian Darby’s exercise regimen and/or possible supplements.
D.D. got out her cellphone and dialed the crime lab. Turned out they had some initial findings from Brian’s white GMC Denali. She listened, nodded, then ended the call in time to bolt for the ladies’ room, where she managed to keep the soup down, but only after splashing a great deal of cold water on her face.
She rinsed her mouth. Ran more cold water over the back of her hands. Then she studied her pale reflection and informed herself that like it or not, she would get this done.
She would survive this evening. She would find Sophie Leoni.
Then she would go home to Alex, because they had a couple of things to talk about.
D.D. marched back into the conference room. She didn’t wait, but led with the big guns because Trooper Lyons was stonewalling them, and frankly, she didn’t have time for this bullshit anymore.
“Preliminary report on Brian Darby’s vehicle,” she said sharply.
She flattened her hands on the table in front of Trooper Lyons and leaned down, till she was mere inches from his face.
“They found a collapsible shovel tucked into a rear compartment, still covered in dirt and bits of leaves.”
Lyons didn’t say anything.
“Found a brand-new air freshener as well, melon scented, the kind that plugs into a socket. Lab geeks thought that was strange, so they took it out.”
Lyons didn’t say anything.
“Odor became apparent in less than fifteen minutes. Very strong, they said. Very distinct. But being geeks, they call in a cadaver dog just to be sure.”
The officer paled.
“Decomp, Trooper Lyons. As in, the lab gurus are pretty damn certain a dead body was placed in the back of Brian Darby’s vehicle in the past twenty-four hours. Given the presence of the shovel, they further surmise the body was driven to an unknown location and buried. Brian got a second home? Lake house, hunting lodge, ski cabin? Maybe if you finally start talking to us, we can at least bring home Sophie’s body.”
“Ah no…” Lyons paled further.
“Where did Brian take his stepdaughter?”
“I don’t know! He doesn’t have a second home. Least nothing he ever told me about!”
“You failed them. You introduced Brian Darby to Tessa and Sophie, and now Tessa is in a hospital beaten to a pulp and little Sophie’s most likely dead.
“He didn’t have secrets! I swear… Brian was a stand-up guy. Sailed the ocean blue, then returned home to his wife and stepdaughter. Never heard him raise his voice. Certainly, never saw him raise a fist.”
A heartbeat pause. Another long, shuddering breath.
“There is… There is another option,” Lyons said abruptly. He looked at both of them, face still ashen, hands flexing and unflexing around his Coke. “Not really talking out of school,” he babbled. “I mean, you’ll find out sooner or later from Lieutenant Colonel Hamilton. He’s the one who told me. Plus, it’s a matter of record.”
“Trooper Lyons! Spit it out!” D.D. yelled.
So he did. “What happened this morning… Well, let’s just say, this wasn’t the first time Trooper Leoni has killed a man.”
12
First thing I learned as a female police officer was that men were not the enemy I feared them to be.
A bunch of drunken rednecks at a bar? If my senior officer, Trooper Lyons, got out of the cruiser, they escalated immediately to more aggressive acts of machismo. If I appeared on the scene, however, they dropped their posturing and began to study their boots, a bunch of sheepish boys caught in the act by Mom. Rough-looking long-