Tessa Leoni: Crash And Burn - novelonlinefull.com
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I don't know what to say; he's telling me stories from someone else's life.
He seems to know as much. His shoulders come down. He regards me expressionlessly. "We made a deal that night. Anytime you thought you smelled smoke, you'd reach for my hand. Do you smell smoke, Nicky?"
I frown at him. For the first time, his words sound familiar, as if I should know what he's talking about. Slowly, I shake my head.
"Did you smell smoke last night?"
I have to think about it. "After the crash," I murmur.
He doesn't say anything. Just a muscle flinches in his jaw. A sign that he's heard. A sign that he hurts.
"I died once before," I hear myself say.
My husband is not surprised by this news.
"There are only so many times a woman can come back from the dead."
"We're going to get through this," Thomas says evenly.
My turn to smile. Because I might have forgotten his name, but I still know when he's lying to me.
Vero, I think.
Then I reach out and take my husband's hand.
Chapter 8.
HOW GOES THE battle?" Tessa asked.
On the other end of the phone, Wyatt contemplated his girlfriend's lighthearted question and promptly sighed heavily. "Long morning," he admitted. "Long, strange morning. But the good news is, I think we should get a puppy."
"What?"
He could already picture her, sitting up straighter, blue eyes blinking in bewilderment.
"A cute yellow Lab," Wyatt continued. "One that will wag its tail and cover you with kisses every time you come home. That would be perfect."
"Perfect for whom? Dogs have to be fed, you know. As well as taken outside, exercised regularly. And Sophie and I are never home."
"Mrs. Ennis would help."
"Mrs. Ennis is seventy years old-"
"And still the toughest broad I know. In fact, if things don't work out between us, I might just set my cap for her."
He could practically feel Tessa rolling her eyes. Which was exactly what he needed. A break from the pressure of a case that might not even be a case. And yet he was sure it was a case. At least a motor vehicle accident.
"So why a puppy?" Tessa was asking him.
"Because a puppy makes everything better. Just ask Sophie."
"Low blow."
"Of course, I reserve the right to present the puppy. We both know I need the brownie points."
"You've been giving this some thought," Tessa said.
"Spent the morning with a search dog," Wyatt volunteered. "Which might have gone better if we'd been searching for a real person, versus some brain-damaged woman's mental delusion." He couldn't help himself; he sighed again.
"Day going that well?"
"Yeah, which means, sadly, I'll never make dinner. Now that we've eliminated the ghosts, we have a real crime scene to a.n.a.lyze and auto accident to reconstruct."
"Catch me up; what do you know thus far?"
Over the phone, Wyatt could hear Tessa shifting her position, most likely getting more comfortable in her black leather desk chair. She wasn't just asking a question; she was interested in the answer. Which was one of the things Wyatt liked best about dating a fellow investigator. Tessa didn't just inquire about his day; she was more than happy to review it with him. And sometimes, as the saying went, two heads were better than one.
Sitting in his county cruiser, waiting for the state police to arrive with the electronic data retrieval box, Wyatt took her up on her offer.
"Single MVA, off road, possible aggravated DWI."
"Blood alcohol level?"
"Well, first complicating factor. Driver smelled like a distillery. According to hospital records, however, her blood alcohol level was only .06-"
"That doesn't meet the threshold for DWI."
"Ah, but the patient suffers from something called post-concussive syndrome. Has taken one too many blows to the head over the past six months. According to the doctor, for a person suffering from a TBI, even a little alcohol can go a long way. So I'm not willing to dismiss it just yet. We could potentially make the argument that for a driver with this condition, .06 is sufficiently impaired."
Wyatt had given the matter a lot of thought, mostly because it was his thought to give. Given the unique laws of New Hampshire, county cops had the power to prosecute all misdemeanor cases. Meaning Wyatt didn't just build a case; he got to present it, too. Factoring in the driver's injuries, this crash could end up being a felony DWI, in which case the county attorney would take over, but Wyatt would still be responsible for the arraignment bail hearing and probable cause hearing. He liked to joke he was half cop, half lawyer. Though given the way the legal system worked these days, you had to be more like 90 percent lawyer just to survive.
"Interesting," Tessa was saying now. "So you have an unimpaired, impaired driver."
"It's possible. Now, booze in question came from an eighteen-year-old bottle of scotch-"
"Expensive."
"Please, you should see the car. Guys traced the purchase of the bottle to a liquor store ten miles from the accident scene, purchased on a credit card. We're going through security footage now to see if we have actual film of her making the purchase. But so far, not bad for a morning's work."
"And yet you're bothered by . . . ," Tessa pushed.
"Liquor store closed at eleven. Accident happened around five A.M. So what was the driver doing between those hours? Because if she was sitting around drinking, her blood alcohol level should obliterate .06."
"Friend, a.s.sociate, to help her out?"
"Possible."
"Husband?"
"Claims he was occupied in a work shed. Apparently hadn't even realized his concussed wife was missing."
"No card for him on Valentine's Day. Where'd the car go off? Busy area? Plenty of shops, restaurants, bars, to keep your driver entertained?"
"Nada. I've counted two gas stations between the liquor store and scene of the crash; that's it. So again, what was she up to for six hours?"
"Maybe . . ." He could hear Tessa thinking about it. "Maybe she wasn't doing anything. Maybe she was just . . . hanging out. Trying to collect her thoughts. When I was patrolling, you'd be amazed how many parked cars I came across in the middle of the night, occupied by lonely souls. If your driver is concussed, suffering from a TBI, maybe she's confused, too. Another lost soul looking for the light."
"So she buys a bottle of scotch. Drowns her sorrows . . ."
"Sips her sorrows. Only .06."
"Then hits the road. Searching for a little girl who doesn't exist."
"Little girl?" Tessa's voice picked up.
Wyatt winced. He hadn't intended to mention that part. "When the first officer arrived at the scene, the woman claimed she couldn't find her daughter, Vero. Only her husband of twenty-two years claims there are no kids. Not now, not ever."
"So she's delusional?"
"Apparently, her brain has been compromised by multiple TBIs. She fell down the stairs doing laundry, then another fall outside, then, of course, the car accident. Long story short, her memory is shot, and she has ongoing problems with headaches, light sensitivity, and extreme mood swings."
"With all due respect, forgetting things isn't the same as making things up."
"What do you mean?" Wyatt asked.
"Did you confirm with the doctors that this woman is indeed delusional?"
"Physicians don't talk. HIPAA and all that. What we know we got from the husband."
"Please. Wouldn't be the first time the husband was the last to know."
"But they obviously don't have a child-"
"And yet she's looking. I mean, even if she's delusional, why that delusion? Of all the short circuits running through her head, why this one? I'd check the odometer, too. Because maybe that's what she was doing for the six hours. Driving around searching for her lost girl."
"Who doesn't exist," Wyatt repeated.
"And yet is clearly important to her. First time she's done this?"
Wyatt hesitated. "Didn't think to ask that question."
"Friends, support system?"
"New to the area."
"Job?"
"Self-employed. Husband and wife work together making props for Hollywood."
"Meaning her only family, only contact, is her husband." Tessa's voice picked up. "The one telling you they don't have kids. The one reporting his wife has had three 'accidents' in six months."
Wyatt got her point. Same thought had crossed his mind, too. And in a cop's world, where there was paranoia, there was often probable cause.
"You suspect domestic violence. Which, I have to say, is what worries me, too." Wyatt thought again of the bruise that had discolored Thomas Frank's jaw. From an impaired wife, lashing out in agitation? Or from a terrified woman acting in self-defense?
"Fits the profile," Tessa was saying, "not to mention a man who beats his wife . . ."
"Might also beat his kids. Leading to what, the death of a girl who doesn't exist? Let's not get completely lost in the land of wild conjecture. I already spent the morning, not to mention significant county and state resources, on a wild-goose chase. At this point, my boss, the sheriff, would appreciate a lot more facts and a lot less fiction."
"Have you even talked to the woman-"
"All in good time."
"You haven't interviewed the driver?" Tessa sounded dumbfounded.
"She'd just been sedated! Woman's having medical issues, thought we covered that."
"So you haven't even questioned her directly-"
"First thing tomorrow. Doc says she needs more time to recover. Which gives us the rest of today to get our ducks in a row: Single-car accident. Lone driver. Possible aggravated DWI."
He could feel Tessa rolling her eyes at him again. Crazy part was, her daughter rolled them exactly the same way.
"Fine. I'll play by your county-cop rules," she granted him. "So looking at just the accident . . . If your driver's blood alcohol level was only .06, why'd she crash?"
"Inclement weather. Impairment from her brain injury combined with said blood alcohol level. Either way, she went off the edge of a steep road; car flew down an embankment."
"Went off or drove off?"
"Waiting for the state police to help us with that one; we need the info from the vehicle's electronic data recorder."
"Suicide?"
"She had her seat belt on, which is one vote in the no column. Then again, open bottle of scotch could be taken as a vote in the yes department. However, and probably most interesting, after the accident, the driver clawed her way up a two-hundred-foot ravine in the pouring rain to flag down help."
"Certainly sounds like a woman with a will to live," Tessa commented.
"Except." Wyatt couldn't help himself. He paused uncomfortably. "She didn't seem to think she needed help for herself. Instead, she begged for a.s.sistance to help find her missing girl. She pleaded for Vero."
"The little girl who doesn't exist?"