Chapter 14
Murder Notes (Lilah Love Book 1)
Itâs time to find out how close my father is to drowning in trouble, and maybe my brother right along with him. I enter the house, stepping into the half-moon-shaped foyer. The stairwell directly in front of me is made of the same gray wood that is beneath my feet and leads upstairs to a cluster of rooms, one of which is the bedroom Iâd once called my own. The glistening teardrop lights of a chandelier dangle from the ceiling high above me, another of my motherâs personal touches to the house, proving she still dwells within these walls. But there is more than my mother here right now. Pocher is gone, but not absent.
Shutting the door firmly behind me, I slip off my coat and hang it on the steel coatrack designed to look like the Eiffel Tower. To my left is an archway revealing the library. To the right, sealed white double doors leading to my fatherâs office, where I am certain he would have met with Pocher, and I resist the urge to charge in there and make demands. As much as I like demands and often find that they shock people into reactions that tell more than their words, they have to be properly timed. In other words, bitch that it is when Iâm feeling as impatient for answers as I am tonight, Iâll start the night out with observation and restraint. Not quite as exciting as the alternative, but in this case, necessary.
I head toward my fatherâs office, the doors opening as I approach. He joins me in the foyer, his black slacks and white shirt fitted, expensive, and endearingly rumpled. And as most fathers would, be they good or bad at parenting, he reacts to my presence, his blue eyes alight as they fall on me. âLilah,â he greets me, closing the small space between us and pulling me close, his big arms wrapping around me.
This, I think, as he hugs me tight and I hug him as well, is a good-parenting moment, and I find myself transported back, at least momentarily, to a gentler place and time, to my youth when Iâd thought him able of saving me from the monsters in the closet. But now I know those monsters are not dragons and trolls but serial killers and rapists. And no one can save me but me.
Done with fairy tales, pretty much now and forever, I pull back, but my father doesnât let me escape, his hands settling on my upper arms the way my brotherâs had last night, while he, as Andrew had, gives me a fast once-over. âYou look good, baby girl,â he declares.
The thing about my father is that heâs charming, a perfect politician, even before he held office. Everyone looks beautiful to him, even if they arenât. Even when they look too thin, as everyone has told me that I do. âThank you, Dad,â I say, despite the certainty he doesnât mean the compliment, and moving past that, I stroke the hair at my temple to indicate his hairline. âI do believe youâre going gray by your ears.â
âIndeed I am,â he says, releasing me to touch the offending areas with his fingertips. âIâm getting old,â he adds, the laugh that follows low, warm, as inviting as always, and part of the reason people like him so damn much.
âYouâre fifty-seven, Dad,â I say. âThatâs not old. And you look great.â I pat my flat belly. âFit and trim. Not even a beer belly for me to tease you about.â And digging for what influences are in his life now, I wiggle a brow. âDoes that mean thereâs a lady friend about?â
âNo one worthy of my daughter,â he assures me, dodging that question, but with as much charm as I expect from him, of course.
âHe means no one that can handle his daughter.â
At the sound of Andrewâs voice, Dad and I rotate to find him joining us. Andrewâs dark jeans are now paired with a black New York Giants tee rather than his uniform shirt. âHeâs dating,â he informs me. âBut no one seems to make an appearance beyond a few dates.â
Dad rubs his always-clean-shaven chin. âBeing mayor of this town isnât as easy as it looks. Itâs small, but it packs one hell of a punch.â
Seeing an opening, I take it. âWith men like Pocher coming around for favors, I imagine it does and he does.â
âPocher doesnât ask for favors,â he replies a little too quickly in my not-so-humble opinion. âBut plenty of others do,â he adds but doesnât give me a chance to ask any of the ten questions that come to my mind, motioning me toward the hallway to the right of the stairs. âLetâs head on to dinner. Katie should be ready to serve.â His cell phone rings and he digs it from his pocket, giving it a glance. âIâll meet you both in there.â He disappears into his office, shutting the door resolutely behind him. Shutting us out.
âKatie?â I ask, returning my attention to Andrew. âWhat happened to Jennifer?â
âMarried and no longer in New York,â he replies, motioning for us to walk.
I fall into step with him, stunned by his explanation, considering Jennifer is sixty-something and has been with this household since we were children. âWho in the world did she marry?â
âNo idea,â he says. âShe just was gone one day. Didnât even say goodbye.â
âThe woman helped raise us,â I say. âHow in the world can she say nothing to you?â
âShe must have been swept off her feet.â
âIâd love that if it were true, but still. This isnât strange to you?â
âLilah,â he scolds. âEverything isnât a crime you have to solve, little sister.â
âSheâs family,â I say, walking through the archway to the dining area, and anything more I would add falls short on my lips, and not because the room has changed. It hasnât. Itâs still as long as it is wide. It still has a massive, rectangular light-oak table etched with flowers as the centerpiece. It still has a fireplace to my right and expensive artwork lining the walls. Those things fit what I know of my family home. What doesnât fit is whoâs sitting at that table. My exâbest friend Alexandra is sitting next to Eddie on the far side, facing me.
Andrew moves to sit with them, as if their presence is expected by him and acceptable. But then, he and Eddie have always been pals, while Eddie wanted to be his brother. And sure, my father might be all hugs and love right now, but I am jolted into remembering all the times I knew heâd settled for a daughter in hopes that Iâd become my motherâs mini-me. Tonight, heâs stuck with me, just me, and he will soon know this and know it well.
Andrew claims the seat at the head of the table, his back to the dormant fireplace, while I hone in on Alexandra. âWhy are you here?â
She shoves her long dark hair behind her ears, spine straightening and discomfort radiating from her. âI tried to tell you todayââ
âTell me what?â I snap.
âSheâs my wife,â Eddie announces, sliding his arm around her shoulders, the star on his tan shirt pocket snagging her hair.
âYour wife,â I repeat, with one reaction in this moment: pissed off. Really damn pissed off, and with good reason. I walk to the table, stopping directly in front of Alexandra, and I press my palms to the surface, leaning toward her. âYou set me up today,â I bite out. âYou played dumb. I expect that idiocy from Eddie, but not you.â
âI didnât set you up,â she insists. âEddie was already meeting me for coffee andââ
âBullshit,â I say. âYou called him.â
âWhat the hellâs going on?â Andrew demands.
My brotherâs apparent confusion tells me one of two things: A) He wasnât in on the diner setup today; or B) Heâs really damn good at lying, and Samantha fits him like a glove I didnât think he could wear. Whatever the case, I stay focused on my bitch of an exâbest friend. âLeave,â I order her, pushing off the table, looking at Eddie, her husband, and bona fide proof that she still has shitty taste in men. âYou, too. Now.â
âLilah, damn it,â Andrew growls. âWhat in the hell is going on?â
âYou tell me,â I say, turning to him. âBecause theyâre here after she baited me for information about the murder at Mickiâs Diner this morning, acting as if she knew nothing when she clearly knew more than I did. Three minutes later, Eddie is at my table, trying to measure dicks with me when I donât have a dick to think with instead of my head.â I look at Eddie. âI have something bigger. A badge. My ~FBI badge~, and like it or not, Iâm here on official business.â
âI donât give a fuck about your FBI badge,â Eddie snaps. âThis isnât your investigation. And we have our man. Go back to LA where you belong.â He glances at Andrew. âShe met with Beth without consulting me.â
Andrewâs eyes narrow on Eddie. âTheyâre friends, Eddie, and I told you to let me deal with Lilah.â
My gaze cuts sharply to my brother. â~Deal~ with Lilah?â
âDonât read into that,â Andrew cautions. âIâm simply stating the obvious. Iâm the chief of police and youâre a visiting federal agent. Family aside, weâre the appropriate chain of communication. Not you and Eddie. And not you and Beth.â
âCommunicate now, ~Chief Love~,â I say. âBecause I should have heard about new developments in this case before dinner at my family home.â
âHad you showed up to the press conference,â he points out. âI would have already told you.â
~Doubtful,~ I think, but I say, âTell me now.â
âAfter dinner,â he counters.
Since I wonât be eating with Eddie and his playmate Alexandra, I make a demand I manage to phrase as a question. âDo you have any real evidence on Woods? Otherwise, it looks like your detective is on a witch hunt to me.â
Andrew scrubs a hand across his jaw, light stubble rasping against his palm. âSo much for âafter dinner.ââ He presses his fingers to the table. âWoods confessed but refused to turn himself in.â
âConfessed,â I repeat, finding this news a little too convenient, but Iâm just not sure for who yet. âWhen, and to who?â I ask, proud of myself for remembering to include the question mark.
âI can answer that,â Alexandra surprises me by interjecting, drawing the roomâs attention. âHe left a message on my office voice mail. It was just before midnight last night.â
âAnd he said what?â I ask.
âHe was rambling like a crazy person,â she says. âTalking like we were going to kill him.â
âKill him? How so?â
âHe talked about the murder and then said he wasnât going to give us a chance to kill him,â she supplies.
âIs there a transcript of that call?â I ask.
âIâll e-mail it to you,â Andrew offers.
âTonight?â I press.
âYes, Agent Love,â Andrew says. âTonight.â
I smirk at the smart-ass. âThank you, Chief Love,â I reply. âAnd where are we on locating Woods?â
â~We~,â Eddie says, âare doing this by the book and covering every possible base. And if you were going to be difficult tonight, why even come to dinner? I mean, weâre regulars here. You are not. Youâre the outsider.â
I could react to this. I could tell him heâs a small-minded, small-dickedâif that is even a wordâwannabe-good detective. And it would feel good. Really damn good, but Iâm struck by the way he seems to be baiting me here at my fatherâs house, where he is normally well behaved. I mean, we insiders all know about my fatherâs lethal temper, easily provoked by disrespect and disorder. Two things he cannot tolerate. And where was Eddieâs car outside? And why would my father, or even my brother, who swears he wants me to return home to live, invite these two here tonight, knowing they would push me away, not pull me closer? Plus, ~why the hell~ didnât Andrew call me about Woods today? Itâs as if I was intentionally sideswiped tonight, my attention directed, if not forced, in one direction: Kevin Woods. Why is the question.
My conversation with Kane returns to me:
~âThere are rumors about your father but not your brother.â~
~I blanch. âWhat? My father? What about my father?â~
~âHis run for a higher office and favors promised to the wrong people.â~
Iâm going to go out on a limb and assume that my father doesnât want me to dig into his business. He wants me focused on Woods, not him. It might not be the case, but my gut, my best friend in times like these, says thatâs exactly what is going on right now. My lips thin and I push off the table, and turn, walking toward the door my father has yet to enter. âLilah,â Andrew calls out. âWhere the hell are you going?â
I donât stop walking. I enter the hallway and head toward my fatherâs office, only to have him meet me halfway. âWhatâs wrong?â he asks, looking concerned, but thatâs a practiced skill for my father, and thatâs exactly what his reaction strikes me asâpracticed.
I stop in front of him. âIs Pocher backing you for a run as New York governor?â
To his credit if Iâve sideswiped him as I believe he did me, he doesnât blink, and his reply is fast and easy. âPocher seems to think the five years I spent in the higher ranks of the NYPD is a good launchpad for a run.â
âThatâs a yes,â I say. âAnd I assume murder, especially one taken over by the FBI, isnât going to please Pocher or help your aspiring political career. Tell me Woods isnât an election-launch fall guy.â
âFor Godâs sake,â my father growls, that temper of his flashing in his eyes. âWhy must you be difficult?â
âDifficultâ is what he has called me all too often as I grew up, usually when I didnât fit into his preferred mold for me, which was most of the time. It cut then, and it cuts now, but then he knows that. Because those close to him know that if he so chooses, he can use words with exceptional skill to hurt you, and do so with the precision of a killer with a deadly blade.
âItâs called doing my job,â I reply. âAnd Iâm good at it.â
âWe have a man who confessed, Lilah. If we get Woods, we win. If this connects to another case that youâre looking to solve, you win with us. We all look good. Itâs not difficult. Donât make it that way.â
âIf we get him? Or if heâs guilty?â
âWhy would he confess if he didnât do it?â he challenges.
âWhy indeed, Father?â I challenge, and with that, I turn and head for the door, grabbing my coat and purse. I reach for the knob, only to hear, âLilah,â in his most authoritative, fatherly voice.
I stop, but I donât turn, several silent, heavy beats passing before he says, âFamily first, daughter. Always. Donât forget that.â
My spine stiffens at the use of my motherâs words, no doubt chosen to manipulate me, and unless Iâm stupid, and Iâm not stupid, thereâs a distinct inference that I might need to look the other way to prove my loyalty to him. I donât bother to reply. I open the door and leave, pulling the door shut behind me, and for several beats, I stand on the porch, a chime singing in the wind, seeming to replay his words, my motherâs words: ~Family first.~ And I wonder if heâll still feel that way when he discovers just how âdifficultâ Iâm about to become.