Tom felt an icy chill. He didn’t think the police had been all that thorough investigating the house after Kelly’s death. It was just a robbery gone bad, or so they believed. But a search warrant was an entirely different matter. Tom wasn’t worried about Murphy finding evidence that would incriminate him in Kelly’s homicide.
But he did worry Murphy might dig up something else.
Something Kelly might have hidden.
Something Tom wouldn’t want anybody to find.
Chapter 21
Tom held the door open for Fox.
“Tom,” Fox said, taking off his hat and tipping his head toward Tom in a quick salute. He trailed Murphy into the house.
“Hang on, Brendan,” Tom shouted, bounding up the stairs behind Fox and Murphy. “Let me see that piece of paper.”
“Suit yourself,” Murphy said.
Tom read the warrant over while Murphy and Fox got to work searching the living room. They both wore gloves and had plastic bags and markers for evidence gathering. Pink anti-static bags for computer stuff, clear plastic bags for other evidence.
Rebecca emerged from the kitchen and surveyed the disruption with a stunned expression. “Brendan, what’s going on here?” she asked.
Murphy didn’t answer. He was opening the drawers of a living room desk and rifling through the contents.
Fox walked over to where Rebecca stood, and Tom joined them. “Hi there, Rebecca,” Fox said to her. “We won’t be too long. A couple hours at most. Sorry about this.”
Rebecca looked at Tom for confirmation. “The search warrant is official. I’ve got to let them do it,” Tom said.
“Well, what are you looking for?” Rebecca wanted to know.
“That’s police business,” Murphy replied.
Tom didn’t like Murphy’s tone. “Were you waiting for me to move my stuff here before you got a warrant?” he asked. “Was that your plan?”
“Whatever you want to think,” said Murphy.
“Were you thinking I’d crack because of the pressure your little team interrogation put me under?” asked Tom.
“Do you have something you want to confess?” asked Murphy. A brief two-man stare down ensued. “I didn’t think so,” Murphy eventually said.
Fox looked sheepishly at Tom. “Listen, Tom, I’m sorry about this,” he said. “I know this is awkward.”
“Well, considering I have to coach your daughter, I’d say ‘awkward’ is a bit of an understatement,” Tom replied.
“If it’s any consolation, Abbey loves playing for you,” Fox said. “She’s not going to know we were here.”
Tom gave a strained smile. He knew that wasn’t true.
Jill had come out of her room. “What’s going on?” she asked, her arms folded across her chest in a defensive posture.
Tom stood beside his daughter. “Honey, they have a search warrant for the house,” he said. “We have to let them do this.”
Jill’s expression became one of total disgust. “Why? What are they looking for?”
“I think they’re trying to decide if I’m a suspect in your mother’s death,” Tom said.
“What! You’re kidding! Don’t they know that I saw the guy spying on us in the woods? That’s who did it! That’s who broke into the house. Why aren’t they looking for him?”
“We’re following all leads,” Murphy said, “including the name your father gave us.”
“Kip Lange,” Tom said to Jill, so she’d know what he told them. Tom didn’t worry about tipping the police off to Lange. Lange could give up Kelly’s role in the drug theft, for all he cared. The link to Tom had died with his ex- wife in that ravine.
Unless Kelly told Lange something before she ran…
Jill was what mattered to Tom now—her safety and as a result, his peace of mind. Tom would sleep better at night knowing Lange had been either ruled out as a suspect or arrested for Kelly’s homicide. But if Roland and Marvin couldn’t locate Lange, Tom doubted Murphy would fare much better. Especially given how Murphy’s sights seemed firmly locked on Tom.
“This is so unfair,” Jill said. “Do they have to search my room, too?”
“Every room,” Murphy said.
“Well, do you guys want some tea while you’re digging through their stuff?” Rebecca asked.
“Yeah, that’d be great,” Fox said.
Murphy shot his partner a disapproving stare that could have melted steel.
“Actually, we’re fine, but thanks,” Fox corrected himself.
“Well, we’ll be in the kitchen if you need anything,” Tom said, guiding Jill to follow him. Tom stopped in the entranceway and looked back at Murphy. “Murphy, I sure hope you’re doing what you said and looking for other suspects, because this is a big waste of your time.”
Murphy didn’t respond.
Tom wished he hadn’t thrown out the box of nails from Home Depot with the SKU number on it.
Tom didn’t watch the search. It was bad enough just listening to it from the kitchen, where he, Jill, and Rebecca now sat. Nobody was in the mood for pie.
“I can’t believe you’re just going to let them do this,” Jill said, with more venom in her voice than Tom had ever heard.
Tom shrugged it off. “Maybe they’ll find something that will help with the investigation,” he said. “What they won’t find is anything connecting me to what happened to your mom, because there is nothing. Look, Rebecca, why don’t you go home? This could take a while.”
“I’m not leaving until they leave,” said Rebecca.
“Okay.”
Tom and Rebecca chatted only in spurts. Jill, for the most part, kept silent.
“I’m not telling anybody at school about this,” Jill said. “I’ll never be able to show my face in school.”
“It’s going to be okay, honey,” Tom said. “I promise.”
The noises continued.
Drawers opened and closed. Closets searched. Boxes ripped open. Computers bagged and tagged. Papers shuffled and scattered. The three sat at the kitchen table, drinking tea—the same table Tom and Kelly had bought when they first moved to the Oak Street home. Tom had made the decision to move back to Shilo the day after Kelly told him she was pregnant with Jill.
She’d put in for a 529, the military separation code for pregnancy. It would take a few months for the paperwork to process and clear, she had said. But their conversations that week weren’t focused on their future together. It was all about the crate, and what Kelly had packed inside.
“Please. Hide the drugs,” she had begged. “Please do it for me. For your baby. Give us a chance. I’ll explain everything when I get back to the States. Please, Tom. Do it for us.”
Tom had done as she asked. He hid the drugs where nobody would ever, ever find them.
On his drive back to his parents’ house, he took a shortcut down Oak Street, where he had seen the rusted FOR SALE sign tapped lopsided into a lawn that was more brown than green.
“This is where we’ll live,” Tom had said to himself. He had a mortgage three months before he had a daughter. Despite all Kelly had done, Tom still loved her deeply and wanted to give them a fighting chance to live together as a family.
The cuckoo clock chirped ten times. Jill had gone back to her bedroom an hour before, presumably to sleep.