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Tessa Leoni: Crash And Burn Part 24

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"Mom!"

Tessa smiled, ruffled her daughter's hair.

"Thank you for the warm milk, Mom," Sophie said.

"Thank you for the company."

TESSA CLEARED THEIR mugs. She walked Sophie back to her room, tucked her daughter into bed.



Then it was back to her room, where she lay in bed and once more stared at the ceiling.

For all of her wise words to Sophie, the truth was, the next bad thing did loom on the horizon. Three years ago, she'd shot a man. It was not an act she regretted. Though she was sorry the police now had that gun.

And she remained a woman who struggled with trust. Because why not simply tell Wyatt what was going on? Why not show some faith in a man who'd never been anything but honest with her?

Funny, the things that scared a woman like her. Enter a room full of hostile gunmen, check. Talk openly and honestly to the man she loved . . . maybe later.

There was one thing she knew she should do, however, first thing in the morning. She would reach out to Nicole Frank, Wyatt's DWI suspect, and see how the woman was doing. Because Tessa knew something even if Nicole didn't remember it.

The past was never completely the past.

It had a way of catching up with you. Especially a past filled with as many sins as Tessa's.

Or with as many secrets as Nicole Frank's.

Chapter 22.

WYATT ORDERED NICKY to remain in the county's SUV. Did he have the authority to do that? Nope. Did he have probable cause to arrest her for anything? Not really. Couldn't nail her for the house fire, as she'd been with him and Kevin the entire time. Even an arrest for Wednesday's crash was problematic, given her blood alcohol reading didn't meet the DWI threshold of .08.

Technically speaking, Nicky Frank could walk away from him and Kevin, not to mention the burning embers of her house, and be well within her rights.

Like h.e.l.l, Wyatt thought, for the third time in as many minutes. She was his only link to something larger, murkier and far more criminal than a lone car accident.

He left Kevin in charge of babysitting, while he went in search of the fire marshal.

"What can you tell me?" Wyatt asked the older man, Jerry Wright, who'd been called out from several towns over. All in all, three separate volunteer fire departments were on the property. It was that kind of blaze, deserving that kind of response.

"Started in the outbuilding," Wright answered crisply now. They had to stand well back, not just because men were still working hoses, but because the flames were throwing off tremendous heat. "Definitely an accelerant, and lots of it. Metal buildings don't normally like to burn. But this one. Shi-it."

Wyatt had checked out the rear of the property, where the gray shed was now a charred, twisted sh.e.l.l of its former self. The shed that had once housed Thomas's tools of the trade. Interesting.

"Who called it in?" Wyatt asked.

"Neighbor, eventually. But given the distances between the properties out here, it had probably already been burning for a bit. Call came in a little after eight. Response time was solid, first unit rolling in by eight fifteen. Still, shed was a goner from the start, I'm told, house already fully engulfed. Whoever wanted this done didn't mess around."

"Any reports of a man on the scene?"

"Negative. House is too hot to enter, so can't swear to what we'll find inside. But from the time we've been here, no signs of life."

Wyatt nodded; he strongly doubted Thomas was anywhere on the property. The man's silver Suburban, which had been in plain sight in the driveway four hours earlier, was now conspicuously missing. Wyatt's best guess, Thomas let the police take his wife away, then torched his own place and split.

But why?

Nicky claimed he was afraid of her, and Wyatt was a smart enough man to understand she didn't mean in the literal sense. More likely, Thomas feared her fickle memories. Three concussions in a row seemed to have unlocked some doors in Nicky's mind. And not all the contents were pretty.

Meaning, what had Thomas and/or Nicky done in the past that at least Thomas was still desperate to hide? More important, how did it relate to the existing, nonexisting, probably dead, possibly still alive mystery girl, Vero?

"Fire's too hot," the fire marshal informed Wyatt now. "You want more info, gotta wait till morning."

"All right, keep me posted."

Wyatt left the man, taking a few steps back to once more consider the blaze. The roof of the house was fully engulfed. It was an impressive sight, an entire home being consumed alive. Windows shattered. Metal groans. A singular type of destruction that was both awesome and terrifying.

He wondered what Nicky saw when she gazed upon it. Was she horrified by what her husband had done? Had to be photos, family mementos, favored possessions, that were even now turning to ash before her eyes.

Yet, when he returned to the car, she simply sat in the backseat, staring at the inferno, blank faced.

"We got an APB out on Thomas's vehicle," he informed Kevin. "'Bout all we can do for now."

Kevin nodded.

"She spoken at all?" Wyatt asked, gesturing to the backseat.

"Not a word."

"Checked her phone?"

"She doesn't have a phone. Lost it in the car wreck, remember?"

"Meaning Thomas has no means of contacting her," Wyatt murmured.

"Unless they have a predetermined meeting place."

"That's it. We're taking her to the station. As long as Thomas Frank is missing, she's our bait."

NICKY DIDN'T PROTEST when they pulled out of the driveway and once more hit the road. She didn't ask where they were going or complain of hunger or thirst. She simply sat, eyes out the window, quilt on her lap.

From time to time, Wyatt would study her in the rearview mirror, trying to decipher what she was thinking. She looked exhausted, as she should be. She looked unwell, as she was. Too thin, too pale, as if a good stiff wind would knock her off her feet. But her face was shuttered, flat affect.

Hadn't someone mentioned sh.e.l.l shock once before? At the accident, the pa.s.sing motorist who'd stopped to a.s.sist. He'd been a war vet and reported she appeared sh.e.l.l-shocked, as in the literal definition of the word. Watching her now, Wyatt saw the man's point. Nicky Frank had gone somewhere inside her head. Question was, when would she come back out again?

The North Country Sheriff's Department was housed in a two-story brick building not far from the county jail and even closer to the county courthouse. It offered a parking lot, fingerprinting and lots of buzzing overhead lights. But no food. For that, Wyatt and Kevin made a detour to McDonald's, one of the only joints open after midnight. Wyatt and Kevin ordered with gusto. Quarter pounders, large fries, large coffees, all the calories, salt and caffeine a good detective needed to stay up all night.

Nicky requested another bottle of water, in a voice that was perfectly monotone. Wyatt would've thought she'd been turned into a statue, if not for the way her fingers stroked the top layer of her quilt. Touching it over and over again. Like she was working the rosary, he thought. A woman lost in prayer. Or offering penance.

They took the food to the station house. This time of night, you could count on headquarters for a little action. County dispatch worked out of the building, meaning there was plenty of noise coming from down the hall, in terms of both phone calls and the operators entertaining themselves between the calls. Of course, bookings happened at all hours, with 2 A.M. being prime time for collared drunks.

Wyatt and Kevin carefully steered Nicky through the lobby, then down the narrow hallway, around one twitchy meth addict, around another. The station lighting always felt glaring to Wyatt, as if trying to compensate for something. It was enough to make him squint. He couldn't imagine how much Nicky was suffering with her condition.

In the end, they set her up in the conference room. Not an interrogation room, because that might have seemed aggressive, and again, technically speaking, Wyatt couldn't make the woman stay. But nor did he want her in their offices, because she needed to feel the pressure. Her life was imploding. For all their sakes, time to talk.

She didn't look at them when Kevin pulled out the chair. She took a seat, gaze forward. Quilt back on the lap. Bottled water on the table. Then she waited.

She's done this before, Wyatt thought. Police stations, interrogation; none of this was new to her. Just as he had his strategy, she had hers.

Wyatt took his time. He set down his McDonald's bag, let the room fill with the unmistakable fragrance of fries. Kevin did the same. Next, Wyatt removed the cover from his large coffee, adding yet more aroma to the mix. Unwrapping his burger, taking his first greasy bite. Yeah, he'd regret it in the morning. A man his age couldn't afford to eat like this regularly, but for the moment, it was a salt-fat-carb explosion in his mouth. Two A.M. eating didn't get any better than this.

Kevin made a show of squeezing out ketchup onto the burger wrapper, then dipping his fries.

Still Nicky didn't say a word, though they all sat so close, Wyatt thought they'd be able to hear her stomach growl at any moment.

"Sure you don't want anything?" he asked at last, voice conversational.

She shook her head.

"We got vending machines, you know. Maybe chips, a candy bar? More gum?"

She shook her head.

"Lights too bright?"

She finally looked at him. Her eyes were tired, he thought, but more than that they were flat pools of resignation. She didn't want. She didn't need. She was simply a woman awaiting her fate.

Wyatt felt a chill then, uncomfortable enough that he got up, wadded up his wrappers and threw away the remnants of his dinner. He kept his coffee. He paused long enough to murmur to Kevin, "Check on the APB. Any news at all, we could use that."

Kevin nodded, disposed of his own wrappers, left the conference room. Wyatt stood alone with Nicky. Their prime suspect. Witness. Victim? Maybe that's what really bothered him. Forty-eight hours later, he still had no idea, and it p.i.s.sed him off.

When he took his seat again, he deliberately placed his elbows on the table and leaned forward.

"What happened at your house tonight?" he demanded.

Her face finally flickered to life. "How would I know? I was with you."

"Your house is gone, you know. Total loss, according to the fire marshal. Meaning everything inside, photos, your paintings, favorite pillow . . . poof."

She didn't say anything.

"Same with the work shed," Wyatt continued. "Gonna be a b.u.mmer for the family business. All those tools, projects, supplies. Gone. Orders that now won't be fulfilled. Clients that will be unhappy. Three-D printer that'll never be used again."

She didn't flinch. The business hadn't been her bailiwick anyway, Wyatt thought. It had been Thomas's.

"First house fire?" he asked now.

She frowned, seemed to come slightly out of her fog. "What do you mean?"

"I mean, all the cities, states, houses you've lived in over the years. Come on, you and Thomas give new meaning to rolling stones."

She frowned again, rubbed her temples. Then held out her hand as if reaching for something. Someone.

Wyatt waited. She didn't say a word. Just her hand, suspended in the air. After another moment, she seemed to realize what she was doing. She replaced her hand on her lap. A single tear rolled down her face.

"Shame it was this house," Wyatt pressed. "You'd put some effort into this one. Repainting the door, working in the garden. Did you think that maybe this was the place you'd finally stay?"

"I missed snow," she murmured, gaze still fixed on the table.

"Where is Thomas now?"

"I don't know."

"You should. You're his wife, his business partner. If you don't know him, who does?"

"Ted Todd Tom Tim ta-da!" she whispered.

"What did you just say?"

"He has no family. He has no friends. He has no place to go." She finally glanced up, met his eyes. "I have no place to go."

"d.a.m.n selfish of him, don't you think?"

"You should take me to a hotel."

"First I want you to tell me about New Orleans. When did you meet?"

"At work. A movie production set. I was working craft services. He was in set production. He told me he waited three weeks to get me to say hi." She spoke the words automatically. Wyatt thought he'd heard that story before, because he had: almost word for word from Thomas that first day at the hospital.

"Is Thomas from New Orleans?" Wyatt asked.

"No."

"What brought him there?"

"I don't know."

"You don't know? Twenty-two years together, and you never asked him what he was doing in New Orleans?"

She peered at him blearily. "Why did it matter?"

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Tessa Leoni: Crash And Burn Part 24 summary

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