Cover Your Eyes (14 page)

Read Cover Your Eyes Online

Authors: Mary Burton

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense

“Can I get you an aspirin or a water?”
She closed her eyes, smoothing her hands over the pink fabric covering. “No. Just leave. I do appreciate you coming.” Her voice had an otherworldly quality that sounded broken. “We’ll talk soon.”
“Okay.”
Slowly Lexis rose, feeling sorry for the woman. Annie’s death may have destroyed Jeb’s life but it had also destroyed Margaret’s as well.
 
 
Margaret moved to the window and watched the music film lady drive off. She glanced at her business card as she turned from the window. Despite the headache she was buoyed by the thought about somebody making a movie out of Annie’s life. “Sure would be special, Momma, if they made a movie.”
A movie made sense. Annie had been a star ready to take the world by storm. No telling where she’d be now if she’d lived. No telling. But safe to say she’d have been rich and living in a fancy house right here in Nashville. And she’d have taken care of her baby sister. No doubt about that.
Margaret moved back into the living room and sat on the sofa. Too bad Momma hadn’t lived to see this day. Too bad. She sipped her lemonade, squinting at the bitter sweetness. She opened the scrapbook she’d made of Annie and slowly turned the pages. The first image was of Annie and Margaret. They were both smiling for the picture but Margaret remembered enough to know they’d not been happy. Nine-year-old Annie had not wanted to wear an outfit that matched her three-year-old sister’s. She’d wanted to look older, like a grown-up girl she’d seen in a magazine.
But Momma had ruled the house then with an iron fist. She’d ignored Annie’s carrying on and crying during the whole drive from their home to the photographer’s studio. When they all pulled up, Momma had looked in the rearview mirror and threatened to beat Annie within an inch of her life if she didn’t smile like a damn angel. In the backseat, Margaret had grinned. As much as she loved and wanted to be Annie, she couldn’t help but enjoy it when she suffered.
And so Annie, who’d tasted Momma’s anger once too often, had stopped her wailing and had smiled. She’d charmed the photographer who had all but ignored Margaret.
Every moment Annie had been alive, she’d cast a long shadow that had trapped Margaret.
Margaret set her glass down and glanced at her palms, slick with the condensation from her lemonade glass. Carefully she closed her eyes and felt the droplets against her skin, remembering the feel of Annie’s blood on her hands.
“Momma, you’d think after thirty years I’d forget, but I can’t,” she whispered.
On that long ago day, Annie’s blood had wiped away all her thoughts. It had mesmerized her. Taunted her. She’d never told her mother how Annie’s blood had pooled on the floor and splashed the walls. Never told.
At first she’d been shocked and broken and then she’d found herself thrust into the limelight. Annie’s death had turned Margaret into the story’s heroine. Poor girl, she discovered her sister’s bloodied house and found her infant niece howling. Bless her heart.
For a time, Margaret had been center stage. She’d been the one reporters had hounded and clamored to see. She’d been the star. For a time.
And then time distanced the world from the murder leaving Annie and Margaret forgotten.
She dried her hands on her skirt and turned the page of the scrapbook, smiling, imagining the warmth of the limelight that would beam on her soon. This time around, she’d see that no one forgot her. No one.
 
 
Deke parked on the corner, shut off the engine and sat in his car taking in the area where Dixie had been killed three nights ago. The yellow crime-scene tape strung by the techs was now gone. He’d wanted to secure the scene longer, but budget and manpower wouldn’t allow it.
Out of the car, he loosened his tie as he moved up the side street toward the stained stretch of sidewalk. Keys jangling in his hands, he studied the area trying to imagine the killer’s approach. Tall shrubs to the right could easily have hidden someone and in the dark the area would have been bathed in shadows. Crime in this area was low and there’d been no reported problems suggesting a predator stalked the area.
He moved up the sidewalk stopping short of the exact murder spot and squatted. Clean-up crews had removed most of the debris, but fading dark stains hinted to the blood that had stained the concrete.
The blood had drawn him back to the scene. There’d been so much. The splatter would have sprayed the killer and his clothes. In daylight, he’d not have gone far unnoticed but the darkness would have given him enough time to get away.
The blood. Dixie’s mangled face.
Both would join the ghosts of the other atrocities he’d seen on the job and haunt him for the rest of his life.
The blood.
It characterized Dixie’s death but also Annie Rivers Dawson’s as well. The dominant image in Dawson’s crime scene photos had been the blood painting the floor and walls.
There were similarities between Dixie and Annie. Both singers. Blond. Beautiful. It was conceivable that the same person could have killed them but a search of the last thirty years had revealed no other crimes that fit this precise victim profile.
A killer could lay dormant for thirty years. It had happened before. But what would have been the trigger this time? Rachel had been publicizing her vigil for a good week. Had her flyer triggered the killer? Or had the killer never heard of Annie and simply been angry or jealous? The latter was the likely scenario.
Headlights shone behind Deke’s vehicle. He rose and turned in time to see a female officer get out of an SUV and open the back door to her vehicle. She unclipped a leash from her waist and reached in and clicked it onto the collar of a hound dog.
A cap covered the officer’s blond hair twisted and pinned into a tight bun. She stood about five eight, had a trim, lean body and moved with confidence as her hound dropped his nose to the ground and sniffed. Fresh-faced, her clear green eyes surveyed the scene before meeting Deke’s gaze. “Detective Morgan?”
Deke extended his hand. “Officer Phillips?”
“Yes, sir. And this is my canine Bo. I hear from your brother you’d like us to follow a trail?”
Police canines were a specialized unit. Whereas Rick’s dog had been trained in protection and apprehension techniques, others were trained to sniff drugs, explosives, or cadavers. Rick had told Deke to call Jessica Phillips. She and her dog Bo were two of the best trackers in central Tennessee.
“That’s right. A blood trail.”
“Do you know where the trail begins?”
“Ten feet down the sidewalk. Rain the night of the murder washed almost all of it away.”
“Let’s give it a try.” She rubbed Bo on the head and then guided him to the spot. Bo instantly dropped his nose to the ground and began sniffing. Seconds passed as Bo sniffed the entire area and then cut right toward the woods.
Officer Phillips followed and soon the two threaded into the stand of trees toward the park. Deke waited until they were several feet ahead before he followed. He stepped over brush, cursed briars grabbing his clothing as Phillips and her hound moved as if they’d been born to hike the woods.
They punched through the thicket to the edges of the park close to a parking lot. Bo sniffed up to the curb of the parking lot, stopped his advance and barked.
As Deke moved closer, Officer Phillips commanded Bo to heel and from a side pants pocket pulled a treat. She fed it to Bo and praised him. “Whatever blood trail started on the other side of the woods, ends here.”
Deke surveyed the area. “Easy enough to park a car here and wait behind the trees.”
Officer Phillips searched the woods. “Killing doesn’t seem random, does it?”
He imagined the killer parking here, cutting through the strip of brush and waiting for Dixie. After killing her, it would be easy enough to retrace steps and leave without being noticed. “No, it does not.”
 
 
It was ten o’clock when Rachel finally found the time to put aside her work and go for a run. Lexis had said she might come by but Rachel had been too antsy to wait. She’d left a note on her front door and headed out.
Outside, the night was cool, but not so cold as to inhibit the itch to move and sweat. Long hours behind the desk were part of a lawyer’s life and though her mind accepted the sacrifice, her body did not.
She stretched her muscles and then satisfied they were warm enough, she began a light jog. It didn’t take long before she’d picked up her pace and now raced through the night. A sense of freedom washed over her.
She ran most days, going as far as ten miles. The exertion kept her muscles loose and her stress low.
What are you running from?
Her brother’s tone had been light, joking, when he’d first asked the question years ago. She’d been surprised by it. Years had passed since that exchange and she still didn’t have an answer for Luke.
As she approached her building, she slowed her pace, letting the strain of her muscles ease. Sweat dripped from her forehead as she slowed to a walk, her hands on her hips. Her breathing still fast and her heart beating hard, she glanced up at the quarter moon savoring its crisp angles.
She reached in the pocket tucked inside her running pants and fished out her front door key and cell phone. As she approached the door she noticed the note she’d left for Lexis was gone. Deciding to call Lexis ASAP, she unlocked the door.
Be careful, Rachel!
Unease rippled up her spine as she quickly glanced from side to side as if expecting to see someone there. Had Colleen returned to tell Rachel about yet another date that had gone wrong? When she saw no one, she jiggled the door handle. Locked. Again, she had the sense of dread. She turned and gripped the key between her fingers ready to jab. “Who’s there?”
No reply. Her heart beat loudly, drowning out the distant sound of cars on the street. The fear did not ease but logic took over and ticked off reasons why she was overreacting. Tired. Worried. Hungry.
Shrugging aside her qualms, she unlocked the door, opened it and disarmed her alarm. A heavy silence greeted her as she glanced inside her darkened house. Again nothing. And still fear outmaneuvered logic.
Rachel opened her cell. Just in case.
She flipped on the lights and found her office in disarray . . . as she’d left it. Every item was as it should be.
Jesus, Rachel, be careful. Think before you act.
As she turned to glance back toward the open door, she heard the
swoosh
of a thin object slicing through the air. She pivoted seconds before a stinging pain ripped through her shoulder.
Rachel screamed and backed into her office, trying to get a look at her attacker as she braced for a second blow. She fumbled with her phone and hit the 911 buttons as a figure wearing a mask and loose-fitting clothes moved from the shadows. A low-hanging hoodie obscured all facial features, but there was no missing the gloved hand gripping what looked like a tire iron.
Rachel hollered so loud her vocal cords strained to the point of snapping. From her cell she heard the 911 operator say, “What’s your emergency?”
“Get the hell away from me!” She cradled the phone to her ear. “Rachel Wainwright. I’m on First Street. I’m being attacked!” She screamed louder and backed up until she bumped into her desk. Her heart raced. Pain bolted through her body. She could barely process clear thoughts as a primal need to survive kicked up her adrenaline.
The attacker hesitated and then lunged wielding a long metal rod. She dodged, grabbed blindly at a bookshelf, snatched a book and tossed it at the attacker. The book hit the rod, deflecting the next blow.
Pain in her shoulder throbbed and her vision blurred. “Help!!! I’m at . . .” She rattled off her address again.
The attacker stopped, breathing hard, and gripping the rod in a black-gloved hand. And then without warning, turned, and ran.
Rachel held her breath, her fingers of her left hand balled into a fist as her other hand gripped her phone. She stood, weak-kneed, heart pounding as she collected her thoughts. As the seconds ticked in silence, the shock ebbed and the pain rolled over her in full force. It robbed her breath away and nearly buckled her knees.
In the distance, she heard sirens. “Lady, are you okay?” a woman shouted.
Gentle hands reached out to Rachel but she screamed and struck back. “Get away!”
“Lady, it’s okay,” the woman said. “The cops are on the way.”
Rachel hugged her injured arm and lowered herself to the floor as pain sliced her.
November 16
 
Sugar,
Saw you in the back of the bar while I was singing tonight. I miss you.
 
A.
 
Chapter Eight
 
Saturday, October 15, 11
PM
 
Deke Morgan arrived at the hospital emergency room, minutes past eleven to the sound of stretchers rattling, machines beeping, and conversations humming. Fluorescent lights highlighted a pallid uneasy feel that agitated his nerves with memories of the night Rick had been shot. He moved to the nurses’ station where a young woman with long dark hair swept into a ponytail frowned over a chart. She glanced up, her gaze sharp and direct. “Can I help you?”
He pushed back his coat so that she could see his badge. “I’m looking for Rachel Wainwright.”
She glanced at her computer and punched buttons. “Room six.”
He let the coat drop over his badge. “Can you tell me how she’s doing?”
“She’s back from X-ray and we’re waiting on the results. You can go see her if you like.”
“Thanks. I’ll do that.” He found his way to the curtained door. On the other side he heard a woman’s irritated voice cursing. He knocked on the door frame and pushed through to find Rachel standing by the bed, dressed in a hospital gown. She leaned heavily on the bed as she stared at an overhead television screen featuring Margaret Miller.
The real killer has been caught. Rachel Wainwright is perverting justice. Lord, it’s my momma’s birthday and that attorney is tearing into old wounds that never healed.
The camera angled back to the reporter, Susan Martinez. Rachel cut her off midsentence with the click of a remote.
Her muscles contracted as if guarding against any movement that would trigger pain. In the full billowy gown, she looked small and petite. Her left arm was in a sling and already he could see black-and-blue marks marring the pale skin of her shoulder. And with no makeup, Margaret Miller’s bruise shadowed her jawline.
Vulnerable came to mind. Afraid. Despite his best efforts, his pity flickered.
A glance at him and her eyes darkened with embarrassment, anger, and frustration. She straightened but the move cost her some pain. “Detective.”
He lingered by the door saddened to see her so rattled. He’d gotten the call forty-five minutes ago from the dispatcher who had reported her 911 call. She’d barely been conscious, her back pressed to a wall, the phone gripped in her hand. Several onlookers had gathered around her house but there’d been no sign of the attacker. “Not one of your better nights.”
She clutched the folds of her gown. “I’ve had better.”
He admired the spunk. “From what the responding officer said, three inches to the right and the attacker would have struck you in the head. Do you know who hit you?”
She shook her head, lifting her chin a fraction. “No. I saw loose dark jeans and a mask and hoodie covering his head. But I didn’t see a face.”
“Did he speak to you? Maybe the sound of his voice.”
“No. He didn’t. He came out of nowhere and struck. I twisted out of the way, for the most part, at the last second. And then I started screaming like a madwoman.”
“That’s likely what saved your life. Too many victims don’t stand up to their attacker and die without uttering a sound.”
She pushed fingers that trembled slightly through her short hair. “Half of Nashville heard me.”
“That’s what the witnesses said. They heard you scream and several called nine-one-one.”
She nodded as if the weight of what happened settled deeper onto her shoulders. “I was lucky.”
“Have you received any menacing letters, emails or texts? Has anyone threatened you?”
She pressed her fingertips to her forehead. “Yeah, there have been emails. There are several that don’t appreciate what I’m doing. And the news station received angry responses to the piece aired about the vigil.”
“Who told you that?”
“Susan Martinez. I saw her yesterday.” She snorted.
“She told me she’d not cover this case again until the DNA came back. That was a load of BS.”
“What about Margaret Miller? Looks like she’s still pretty angry with you. Could she have done this?”
She glanced toward the dark television screen. “I don’t know. The woman lost her sister. She’s clearly still hurting. My intent is not to hurt her. I just want the DNA test.”
He eased into the room still careful to give her space. “Old wounds can generate a lot of hate.”
“Jeb deserves to have that test run. Which by the way, I’ve not seen results on yet.” Fire sparked in her eyes.
Good. He didn’t like seeing fear reflecting back. “I checked with the state lab. They haven’t finished the testing yet.”
She latched onto this bit of normalcy with a drowning woman’s zeal. “When do you think they will be finished?”
“A week. Give or take. They’ve a hell of a backlog.”
“Jeb’s case should be moved to the front of the line. He’s been asking for this test for a decade.”
Her irritated bark drew him closer. “If he’d had you in his corner ten years ago then he would have gotten his results.”
“That a compliment?”
“Let’s say I know a pit bull when I see one.”
She wiggled the finger of the hand in the sling. She winced. “I’m not feeling much like a pit bull now.”
“You put on a good show.”
A smile tugged the edges of her mouth. “That’s good to know.” A silence settled between them before she dropped her gaze to her phone’s keypad. “I better try Colleen again. They won’t let me out of here without an escort.”
“Have you heard about the X-rays?”
“Not yet. But I don’t want to wait anymore. I hate hospitals.”
“I’ll find the doc.”
“That’s not necessary.”
Her thready voice suggested mustering energy bordered on Herculean. Shit. One thing to go head-to-head with a pit bull, but it was another to kick a dog when it was down. No need to let her struggle. He had enough pit bull for them both right now. “Be right back. Do not move.”
“Look, you don’t need to—”
Her protests were swallowed up by the sounds of the hospital. It didn’t take him long to find the doctor and insist that he be informed of Rachel’s results. Fifteen minutes later Deke and the doctor returned to discover Rachel had wrangled on her jogging pants up under her gown and slipped on her running shoes. Her shoelaces dangled free and the tight jogging top lay on the unmade gurney, clearly discarded in frustration, leaving her stuck with the billowing mint green gown as a top. He pictured her walking out of the hospital half dressed, her head held high.
“You’re leaving like that?” Deke asked.
She gathered the gown and balled it at her waist so that her pants showed. “If I have to.”
Admiring her, or liking her, was not supposed to be in the cards. He chalked up this unexpected tenderness to fatigue. “Before Ms. Wainwright heads out of here half dressed, Doc, can you tell us about her injuries?”
The doctor, slim, young, and tired, peered through thick glasses at the report. “Ms. Wainwright did not sustain any fractures or breaks. And there is no damage to the shoulder, which had been my initial worry. There is deep bruising and she’s going to be sore for days but with rest and lots of ice packs she’ll be fine.” He pulled a pen from his pocket and clicked the end. “I’ll write you a prescription for a painkiller.”
“I don’t need drugs,” she said. “I’ll make do with aspirin.”
The doctor eyed her. “We gave you a mild sedative before your X-ray and that’s deadening some of the pain. It will wear off soon.”
“I have aspirin at home.”
Deke nailed his gaze on Rachel. “Write the script, Doc. And ask the hospital pharmacy to fill it.”
Rachel glanced at her jogging top as if considering how she’d get it over her wounded shoulder. “I don’t do drugs. I’m fine.”
When the doctor hesitated, Deke glared. “Get the meds.”
The doctor pulled the script pad from his coat pocket. “I’ll be right back with them.”
She tossed the jogging top aside again and this time sat in a chair. She leaned forward to tie her shoes but pain halted her halfway.
“You’re stubborn,” he said.
“Tell me what I don’t know.”
He tapped his belt with his forefinger. “Did you try Colleen again?”
“Yes.” She glared at her phone as if willing it to ring. “She’s not picking up. Likely on a date.”
He knelt in front of her and grabbed the laces. With a hard jerk he tied and double knotted the first shoe. “She’ll ignore a call from her partner?”
Rachel shrugged and winced. “Especially from her partner who calls her far too often late at night with work-related issues.”
He tied and double knotted the second shoe. “Anyone else you can call?”
She clutched her phone tighter. “No worries, Detective. I’ll catch a cab.”
Translation: she had no one to call. “I’ll drive you home.”
She shook her head as if this indignity was the straw that broke the camel’s back. “Not necessary. Really. Not necessary.”
“But it’s what’s going to happen.” He rose and unfastened his button-down shirt.
“What are you doing, Detective?”
“Giving you the shirt off my back, Ms. Wainwright. I’m wearing a T-shirt underneath so you are safe.”
That made her laugh. “That’s a relief.”
He shrugged off the shirt and held it open for her. “Turn around and I’ll help you put it on.”
She stood slowly and let the gown fall to the floor. The sight of the darkening bruise slashing across her back stoked his temper. Shit. She’d taken a hell of a hit.
Rachel slipped her good arm into the sleeve and he draped the other side over her other shoulder.
She fumbled with the shirt’s buttons. “I won’t be getting any dates in this getup.”
He’d never thought about her in the context of a love life but now found himself curious about the kind of man she dated. Whoever the poor bastard was he’d have to be one tough customer. When she turned he brushed her hands away and buttoned the shirt. As his knuckles grazed the shirt the muscles in her body tensed. She smelled of clean air and the faintest scent of basic, practical soap.
At that moment a nurse arrived with a wheelchair. She glanced at Rachel’s attire and nodded. “That will work.”
Rachel moved slowly toward the wheelchair as the nurse pushed it toward her. Gently, she lowered into the seat, flinching when her shoulder bumped the edge slightly.
The nurse, a tall fit woman with dark brown hair, held up the bottle of pain meds as she leveled her gaze on Deke. “I know you.”
He looked at the nurse and flipped through his memory. For a moment her name escaped him and then he remembered. “Brenda.”
“That’s right. We met a month ago.”
“Right.” She dated his partner KC. He only knew about her what KC had shared. She seemed to be good for the guy so he took her on face value.
Brenda smiled. “I guess we’ll see you on Monday at his retirement party.”
“Right. Wouldn’t miss it.”
Brenda held up the bottle of pills. “Ms. Wainwright should have one of these, with food, as soon as she gets home.”
“I don’t do drugs. I don’t want to be loopy,” Rachel focused on the woman’s name tag. “Nurse Tilden.”
Brenda smiled as if a naïve child had spoken. “Oh, you sure will want to be loopy when that shoulder starts hurting. Take the meds.”
Deke took the pills and pocketed them. “She’ll take her pills.”
Brenda raised her eyebrow. “And you are her husband, boyfriend?”
“Doing my job.”
“Good enough.” Brenda patted Rachel on her good shoulder. “Take your meds and the night will go better and you’ll heal faster.”
Rachel fingered a button on the shirt. “Right.”
Deke stepped aside. “Lead the way.”
The nurse pushed Rachel through the double doors and out next to the curb as Deke followed. Outside, she moved in front of them. “Hold while I get my car.”
“I can take a cab,” Rachel protested.
“Shut up.”
“Don’t tell me to shut up.” She collapsed back in the chair.
Without a backward glance, he moved through the lot toward his car wondering why he was bothering.
 
 
Rachel watched Deke Morgan stride across the parking lot, his shoulders back and his gait purposeful. He reminded her of so many cops she’d met over the years. Self-assured and confident. There might have been a time when she’d have believed or followed that confidence but no more. She knew better than anyone that cops weren’t right all the time and the ego that allowed them to charge into darkened alleys after a criminal was the same ego that blinded them when they were wrong.
A self-assured cop had arrested her brother. No amount of talking or reasoning would sway his mind. He’d been sure.
As Deke pulled up in front of the circle in an SUV, he moved around the side of the car opening the passenger door. Without asking, he reached for her good arm to steady her as she rose. His touch was as gentle as it was unyielding. As much as she wanted to deny his help, she needed it. Rachel had her share of quirks, but above it all she was practical.
She’d allowed him to guide her to the car and hover as she eased into the car. He pulled the seat belt out and leaned over her as he clicked it in place. The faint scent of soap and leather wafted around her as he moved with clinical precision away from her and closed her door. Seconds later, he slid behind the wheel and they were driving away from the hospital.

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