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Challenging Matt
“Think of him?”
Matt frowned. He’d never heard that careful tone in Connor’s voice before. “You investigated Peter when he began dating my mother—you must have an opinion.”
“I found nothing in the background sweep that indicated a problem.”
“But you don’t like him.”
Connor’s face was expressionless. “I don’t like very many people—it’s a hazard of the job. I’ll let you know when I have a report on the two women.”
“Thanks.” Matt headed toward his car again, still frowning.
Just because Layne McGraw and her aunt were asking questions about the embezzlement case, it didn’t mean anything was wrong. The D.A.’s office hadn’t doubted William Hudson’s guilt, so surely they were satisfied with the evidence. The idea that Matt might have missed something himself was disturbing—should he have seen things the police hadn’t?
Don’t you want to know if there’s more to what happened than what it looks like? Layne McGraw’s question had been echoing in Matt’s head, and he tried to push it away. It was natural William’s family wanted to believe in his innocence; it didn’t mean he was innocent.
* * *
IN THE BEDROOM Layne always used at her aunt’s house, she kicked off her shoes and wiggled her toes in relief, grateful she’d decided to stay the night. She hated pumps. And nylons. She hadn’t worn nylons since her job interview with the Babbitt.
No doubt the women Matt Hollister dated were fashion mavens who wouldn’t be caught dead without stockings, and probably silk to boot.
Layne glanced at her reflection in the mirror, chagrined as she recalled Matt’s expression at seeing her sister. Her green silk dress hadn’t looked that bad, but she couldn’t compete with Jeannie. And why she cared when the man in question was Matt Hollister, she had no idea.
Layne lay down on the bed, unable to stop thinking about the gala. At least Hollister had kept his cool better than her aunt; having Aunt Dee confront him was astonishing, but it was an indication of how desperate she felt.
The house was silent and Layne rolled over to stare at the dark ceiling, thinking back to the nightmare almost seven months before. Uncle Will’s suicide note hadn’t sounded like him, just a brief typed message, with no personal word to his wife of twenty-nine years. He’d always handwritten his letters; even his business correspondence was drafted first by hand. Back in December she’d told the police she questioned whether her uncle had actually written the so-called suicide note, but they’d dismissed her, claiming a suicidal person didn’t necessarily follow their normal pattern. Maybe, but she still wondered.
A picture filled her head of Uncle Will laughing on the Friday after the Thanksgiving holiday, not long before his death. They’d been making sandwiches from leftover turkey and he was talking about the future as if he didn’t have a care in the world. A few days later discrepancies were found in his client records, a handful of newspaper articles were published, accusations were made against him....and then he was found dead, before he was even arrested.
Yet if it wasn’t suicide, it had to be murder.
She hadn’t discussed the possibility with Aunt Dee, though it must have occurred to her, as well. And it would mean someone had gotten in and killed Uncle Will in his home office. If that had happened, it was mostly likely someone he’d known well...someone he’d trusted. Someone like Peter Davidson, the partner with whom he’d shared the business. The friend who’d turned his back on his old buddy as soon as the suspicion of embezzlement was raised and was now trying to get away with all the proceeds from selling the company.
It appeared Peter Davidson had emerged from the scandal with a spotless reputation. But what if he was involved? It could mean he was a thief and potential murderer.
Damn.
Layne got up and pulled on a robe, deciding she might as well get some work done since she was too restless to lie still.
Sleep these days was elusive. Her uncle had kept meticulous records and documentation on everything, but his company records were in terrible shape thanks to the way they’d been packed, and most of the home records were boxed and stored in the upstairs storage room next to the master bedroom suite. No doubt Uncle Will could have put his hands on whatever he wanted, but she didn’t know what she was looking for and she couldn’t ignore a single scrap of paper in case it was important.
Sitting at her uncle’s desk, Layne read through her notes and the logs she had made of what she’d found. It all seemed innocuous. The personal items that weren’t damaged she had set aside for her aunt—others needed fixing and some were damaged beyond repair.
At the moment it was nearly impossible to make any progress without knowing what she was investigating. The police department claimed they couldn’t release anything because it was an open case and had to be kept confidential. The excuses might be valid if they were treating it as an ongoing investigation. But they weren’t, and she suspected somebody with influence was blocking her access.
And who could that influential person be?
Peter Davidson?
If so, it was no wonder Aunt Dee hadn’t gotten anywhere. The authorities probably didn’t realize the way they were acting was enough by itself to make her question if they had something to hide. The few newspaper articles about the scandal were no help; they were vague and talked about missing money at Hudson & Davidson, but it had all happened so quickly and with Uncle Will dead, they’d shifted to fresh stories.
Layne pressed a finger to her temple as she read an unfinished memo Uncle Will had scribbled a few days before everything fell apart. There was no address or salutation, so the intended recipient was a mystery.
Come on, she urged her tired brain, trying to determine if there was any significant meaning in the bold, strong lines of her uncle’s handwriting. But there was nothing she could see, and she put it on the stack to read another time when her head was clearer.
Tucking her legs under her, she leaned back in the comfortable executive-style chair and closed her eyes. Talk to me, Uncle Will, she pleaded silently. If you’re here in the house the way Aunt Dee seems to think, you must have a reason.
* * *
IT WAS JUST after 5:00 a.m. Sunday when Connor O’Brian parked across the street from the Hudson home in Carrollton, Washington, his gaze sweeping up and down the neighborhood.
He could barely remember a time when he wasn’t on alert, watching for the next threat to come his way, whether it was a gang of Dublin street brats when he was ten, or a group of mercenaries when he was working in covert ops. Working with half of the alphabet soup intelligence agencies in the world had educated him in more ways than one.
After his father’s death his family had moved to Dublin, and with his mother working several jobs, he’d gotten into more trouble than he cared to think about. It had taken several close calls with the law and a new stepfather with iron nerves to keep him out of more serious trouble. And he’d never even thanked Grady for any of it.
Connor massaged a jagged scar above his knee that had almost ended his career when he was twenty-two. Maybe it would have been better if it had; now his memories were a maze of scars...deaths that ought to have been prevented, friends lost and innocence destroyed. Espionage was a hard road once you’d started down it. Working for the Eisleys had come as a welcome break. Instead of international intrigue, he now dealt with ordinary intrigue. The motivations were often the same, but the scale was smaller. But then, one person’s life was just as important to them as another, so maybe scale was moot.
The rising sun showed details of the house—large and comfortable, in an affluent neighborhood—and he snapped several pictures. His staff was already doing a full background sweep on Layne McGraw and Dorothy Hudson, except there were things you couldn’t learn about people from a security report. He had his own methods, somewhat unorthodox, for getting a read on a situation.
A faint whine came from the passenger seat of the Jeep.
“Not yet, boy,” he said to the large rottweiler.
Finnster whined again, his gaze fixed on the house opposite the Jeep. He was smart; he knew his master was watching that house. There were few men that Connor trusted as much as the highly trained dog.
Finn was the closest thing he had to family in the United States. Everyone else was in Ireland. His stepfather had died of heart failure earlier that spring and his mother had moved back to Dún Laoghaire to be close to her daughter. As a rule, Connor spared little energy on sentimentality, but he regretted Grady’s passing more than he cared to think about. He’d always thought they’d have more time to know each other better.
Catching a flash of his reflection in the rearview mirror made Connor’s mouth twist in a humorless smile. Time? He was fifty-four now, and Grady had been nearly eighty. When were they supposed to become closer—on his rare, brief visits back home?
Still, his lost opportunities with Grady were the reason he didn’t want Matt to trash his relationship with Peter Davidson unnecessarily. He didn’t personally like Davidson—wealthy men sometimes took detours around moral issues and Peter was too polished for his taste—but he was a prize compared to S. S. Hollister. Connor snorted. Now, there was a man he had absolutely no use for...and for a long time it had looked as if Matthew would become just like his father.
Connor focused his camera on the classic Mustang parked in the driveway. It was the same car he’d seen Layne McGraw driving when she left the Eisley Foundation building. Something about her name had bothered him from the beginning, so he’d pulled his file on Peter Davidson after Matt’s visit to his house and found a reference to her in Hudson’s obituary, which was included with Davidson’s file.
William Hudson is survived by his beloved wife, Dorothy; nieces Layne, Stephanie and Jeannette McGraw; and nephew Jeremy McGraw...
The obit didn’t discuss William Hudson’s suicide, or that he’d been facing arrest and indictment for embezzling.
The rottweiler whined again.
“Patience, my friend,” Connor murmured, watching for signs of waking in the household, perhaps a curtain moving or a light coming on.
Ah...or miniblinds being opened.
Finnster nudged Connor’s elbow.
“All right. Let’s see how they react to you.”
He checked the microphone on Finn’s collar to be sure it was secure, tested the receiver in his ear, then let the dog out of the Jeep and tossed him a folded newspaper. He made a gesture with fingers, giving the command. The rottweiler drifted across the street and dropped the paper on the driveway before running to the front door, scratching and barking. When it opened, he pivoted and dashed back to the newspaper.
Layne McGraw followed, yawning. She put her hands on her hips and grinned at Finn. “What are you doing, making all that fuss out here? It’s Sunday morning—don’t you know people are catching up on their sleep?”
Finn nosed the newspaper forward a few inches. The newspaper routine was a maneuver they’d used more than once—how someone acted with a dog was revealing. Besides, Finnster was a good judge of character; his approval could be measured in how close he let someone get to him.
Finnster barked eagerly. He crouched down and cocked his head to one side, looking at Layne.
The ham.
Rottweilers had a reputation for ferocity in some circles, but Finn could make himself into a clown, scrunching up his face and using his eyes with the skill of a silent-screen actress. It was why Connor had picked him as a puppy.
“It’s very thoughtful of you, boy, but that belongs to someone else. Aunt Dee doesn’t take the paper. Did you go for a walk with someone and get away?” The girl’s voice was amused, coming clearly through the radio receiver in Connor’s ear.
Finn yipped again. “It’s all right, I’m harmless.” She held out her hand. “Give me a sniff. I probably smell like my aunt’s cat, but JoJo is okay with dogs as long as they let him be the boss.”
Finnster allowed himself to be coaxed and was soon on his back, legs waving in the air as he got his tummy rubbed, along with the place behind his ears that turned him into mush. He was in canine heaven.
Rolling his eyes, Connor belatedly lifted his camera and began shooting pictures.
“What have you got there, Lani?” he heard another voice ask a minute later.
Startled, Connor realized he’d missed Dorothy Hudson’s arrival. Damn it all, he couldn’t afford to get soft. He eased down in the driver’s seat to be less visible and continue taking photos. Since Layne McGraw had seen him the day she’d come to talk to Matt, she might recognize his face if she got a good look in his direction.
“He’s a marshmallow, Aunt Dee,” Layne declared. “His owner probably took him out for a run and he got away. See? He’s dragging a leash and brought us somebody else’s newspaper. Maybe the house looks like his home.”
“What a good boy.” The newcomer added to the caresses Finn was receiving.
If possible, the rottweiler melted further, wriggling along the flagstone driveway to position himself equally between them. His hind legs were even paddling, a sure sign of his pure and complete surrender.
Connor flipped through the Davidson file and found a picture of Dorothy Hudson. The woman petting his dog was just as beautiful as the woman in the photo, though her smile didn’t have the same merry quality. In fact, something about that sad smile reminded him of his sister back in Ireland, who’d never really gotten over her husband’s death.
“What should we do about him?” Layne asked, drawing Connor’s attention. His instincts told him that Layne McGraw and her aunt were decent people, an opinion Finnster would certainly endorse. Yet even decent people did strange things, and they could make serious trouble with the best of intentions.
“Let’s see if he has a license tag.”
Time for their exit strategy. Connor lifted a dog whistle to his mouth—it was outside the audible range for humans—and blew three short blasts, followed by another two.
What the...?
Connor stared. The bloody animal barely twitched an ear, instead he reached out a leg and pawed Layne McGraw’s knee. He was utterly ignoring the command to leave...the toughest guard dog in the state, with highly specialized and unique training, had been corrupted by a pretty girl and her aunt.
Connor sent the command again and Finn finally scrambled to his feet, cocking his head as if he’d heard something.
He barked twice, looking intently down the street and dashed away before the two women could grab his leash.
Scowling, Connor drove after him. Two blocks away he stopped, leaned over and opened the passenger door. Finn climbed in, panting from running, tongue happily hanging from one side of his mouth.
“You should be ashamed of yourself,” Connor scolded. “Do you have nothing but fur between those ears?”
Finn didn’t appear abashed. He settled down with a pleased sigh and wagged his tail the way any other dog remembering a treat would wag—certainly not like an animal that had been schooled to follow whistled commands without question. The first time those commands were given.
Connor wasn’t superstitious, but he couldn’t help wondering if the whole thing was an omen.
Perhaps the McGraw woman and her aunt were going to be an even bigger problem than he’d anticipated.
CHAPTER FIVE
“I WONDER IF Jeannie spent the night with Matthew Hollister?” Layne said as she pulled into her parents’ driveway.
“You think she’d go home with a man an hour after meeting him?” Aunt Dee asked. She didn’t exactly have a hangover from drinking too much at the gala, but she looked a little worse for wear and had been quieter than normal.
“I have no idea, but you saw her expression when she met him, and he’s been linked with several women since returning to Seattle.” Layne parked next to her brother’s Acura and behind Steffie’s Lexus. Only Jeannie’s sporty BMW was absent. She looked at the house and sighed; usually she tried to get there when dinner was already on the table, but Aunt Dee liked to arrive early.
“Come on, Lani. It’s just Sunday dinner with your parents,” Dee chided as they got out, each collecting their contributions for the meal. In Aunt Dee’s case, fresh home-baked rolls and dessert, with Layne’s contribution being sparkling cider, a pint of cream and two pounds of Seattle’s Best Coffee beans.
“I know. That’s the problem.” Inside the house Layne dutifully kissed her mother and father and greeted Steffie and Jeremy. “Isn’t Jeannie coming?” she asked, giving her mom the coffee and putting the cream and cider in the fridge.
“I’m here,” Jeannie called as she sailed through the front door. “I got held up at the office.”
“It’s Sunday,” Layne said, nibbling on a piece of celery from the vegetable tray. “Doctors may be on call 24/7, but don’t executives get the weekend off?”
“Hey, I work in the real business world, not a two-bit joint like the Babbitt.” An uncomfortable silence followed and Jeannette flushed. “Oh, Layne, I didn’t mean anything by that.”
Layne shrugged and popped a piece of cauliflower in her mouth. It was hardly a surprise how Jeannie and the rest of the family felt—working at the Babbitt wasn’t prestigious or high paying and would never make her famous. But what was wrong with just being good at your job?
One of these days she’d meet a terrific guy and they’d have two or three kids. She couldn’t be the kind of mom who baked cookies—she was too lousy of a cook—but she’d get them from a great bakery and go to all their school programs and accept whoever they wanted to be. You could do that when you were an everyday person rather than a famous heart doctor or supremely confident orthopedic surgeon and expected all your kids to be supercharged versions of yourself.
It wasn’t even that she resented her parents’ careers—they’d helped thousands of people over the years—but she wanted something like what her aunt and uncle had shared. Though Uncle Will’s company had become hugely successful, it was his marriage that had meant everything to him. Besides, she was tired of feeling as if she’d failed her family because she hadn’t been born as gorgeous and ambitious as the rest of them.
“Uh, well, can I get anyone a drink?” Layne’s father asked. He was a big believer in smoothing over discord.
A hasty chorus of requests followed as Layne stepped down into the open great room to where most of the trophies and awards her brother and sisters had gotten were displayed, among them Jeannie’s Phi Beta Kappa key, a letter of appreciation to Dr. Stephanie McGraw for saving the governor’s wife, and Jeremy’s track-and-field Olympic gold medals. His silver and bronze medals weren’t on display—anything that wasn’t the best wasn’t good enough in the McGraw family.
“Layne, I’m sorry,” Jeannie said from behind her. “I just don’t understand why you can’t work at a national magazine or major newspaper, at the very least.”
“You’re just making things worse, sis,” Jeremy told her, giving Layne a hug. “I personally want you all to quit your jobs and come work on my campaign next year. How about it, Layne? We can be the fighting McGraws, righting wrongs and bringing justice to a weary world.”
Layne loved her family, but sometimes she wished she lived in Timbuktu and only saw them on major holidays. “Save the campaign speeches, Jeremy. I’m staying at the Babbitt.”
“Here’s to our next U.S. congressman,” declared Barbara, handing Layne a glass of her favorite sparkling water.
Everyone dutifully raised their beverages and echoed the toast. Layne was certain Jeremy would be elected; he got everything he went after—like going to the Olympics.
“So when are you getting married, Jeremy?” Aunt Dee asked as they sat down to dinner.
“After Lissette is back from Antarctica and has finished her study on the emperor penguin.”
“It must be hard, knowing she’s down there in an observation station for the winter. It gets to almost a hundred below freezing, doesn’t it?”
“Yes, but Lissette has been looking forward to being on an Antarctic research team for years. I couldn’t ask her to give up something so important because we’re getting married.”
Layne cast a grateful glance at her aunt as Dee continued asking questions.
The meal was one of Barbara McGraw’s healthy offerings—chicken breasts with mushrooms and asparagus in a light garlic wine sauce. Delicious, naturally. Barbara wasn’t an inspired cook like her sister, but when she did something, she did it very well.
The expected pitch about going to work at the university came when Layne was helping her mother wash up after dinner.
“Dear, Jeannie shouldn’t have said that earlier about the Babbitt,” Barbara murmured quietly, casting a displeased look into the great room where her husband and three eldest children were playing bridge.
“I’m not sure she can help herself. At least with me.”
“Perhaps. Relationships between sisters are complicated. But we’re all concerned that your talents aren’t being fully utilized at the Babbitt. I realize you love research, that’s why I spoke to Sheldon about your joining the study team he’s forming.”
“It’s not the same kind of research, Mom,” Layne returned drily. For a brilliant woman, Barbara could be quite dense when she chose to be.
“But it’s still uncovering information and learning new things. And if you went after your PhD, just think of everything you could find out. All sorts of new facts about diseases and how to cure them. Give Sheldon a call and talk to him.”
“I can learn new facts at the Babbitt without writing a dissertation and God knows what else is involved in getting a doctorate.”
Barbara’s eyes opened wide. “Layne—”
“I’m kidding, I know what’s involved in getting a PhD,” Layne said hastily. Her mother would have a stroke if she believed one of her children didn’t know every step, in detail, of getting an advanced degree. “But I’m not going to change my mind, I’m happy at the Babbitt and that’s where I’m staying.”
“Stubborn,” Barbara muttered. “You’ve always been just like your grandmother that way.”
Layne gave her a bright smile. “Gee, Mom, that may be the nicest thing you’ve ever said to me.”
* * *
ON TUESDAY EVENING Layne was settled at Uncle Will’s desk, logging more items from his old office at work. She had a feeling she was missing something, she just didn’t know what.
Mostly she needed more information.
Maybe if Aunt Dee got the autopsy report she could approach the investigation from a different angle. Of course, that was a long shot, too. Right now she was operating on her aunt’s belief in her husband, and her own vague sense that something wasn’t right about what had happened. After all, where was the missing money? Aunt Dee sure didn’t have it, and in his letter Peter Davidson had made a point of telling her he’d personally repaid the stolen funds from his own pocket.
Moodily, Layne flipped on Uncle Will’s computer. It went through the regular start-up routine and she figured it hadn’t been turned on since before his death.
Then Layne frowned.
Who had turned the power off? Aunt Dee avoided computers like the plague and certainly wouldn’t have known how to turn it off properly. The police? Maybe if they’d confiscated the CPU and returned it, but it was unlikely they’d hook it back up again. And why would Uncle Will write and print a suicide note, then turn the computer off when he’d always left it on?
Maybe somebody else had been in the office...like a murderer.
You’re reaching, Layne thought impatiently.
After a few minutes Uncle Will’s favorite screen saver appeared—mostly pictures of Aunt Dee shifting one to the next—and Layne wiggled the mouse to show the desktop again. She opened Microsoft Word and looked at the recent document list. It was really old stuff and she was relieved not to find a saved file of the suicide note.