Chapter 29
Murder Notes (Lilah Love Book 1)
The drive home is all about how the men in my life are driving me crazy. All of them, Greg included. I went on the line for that man, and now. Now, I think he might be involved in this. Or maybe heâs just a dirty, rotten loser. I walk into the house, and do what I do to stay sane. I strip and pull on pajamas, head to Purgatory, and start trying to solve a crime. For hours, I scour the data Tic Tac sent me, looking for links to Kane, Pocher, or Romano, and itâs not easy. Looking for family who knows family or friends. All I need is one link to Laney and I find the link to my attack and, I believe, to these murders.
At four in the morning, I lay my head on the desk. At six, I wake up with my cheek stuck to the desk and only an hour to meet my brother. I rush to the shower and forget brands and money. I just toss on a pair of faded jeans and a sweater along with a North Face jacket, load up my briefcase, and head for the car, dialing Andrew as I start the engine. âLetâs do the graveyard first so Iâm not dreading it the entire time weâre eating.â
âIâll meet you there.â
Fifteen minutes later I pull into Cedar Lawn Cemetery and park under a tree. My brother parks next to me, driving his fancy Porsche 911 today, just one of his three vehicles. I lean on the hood of my rental, and he joins me, also in jeans and puffer jacket. âSorry I missed you last night,â he says.
âShit happens,â I say, my stomach twisting and turning with the kind of gut-wrenching emotions I often think Iâm now incapable of feeling.
âYou really hate this, donât you?â
âThis sucks, Andrew.â
âI know.â He motions me forward and we walk to her grave, and damn it, my cheeks are all wet and Iâm crying.
Andrew wraps his arm around me, and we start telling stories about Mom. âI still donât understand how she ended up with Lucasâs dad.â I glance up at him. âDo you think they wereââ
âYes. I do. And I was angry at her for a long time over it, but she was human. We all are.â
His cell phone rings and he pulls it from his coat pocket. âThe NYPD.â He answers the call, a grim look on his face. âRight. Got it. My sisterâs in town. Yeah. The profiler. I think she might want in on this one. Right. Yes. Weâll take a chopper.â He ends the call. âLilah.â
âWhy did you just say my name like that?â
âThere was a decapitation in Manhattan.â
âOh. Well. Donât worry. Iâm not shaken, Andrew. I do this for a living. But why did they call you in the first place?â
âIt was a Romano, and the trademark kill of a Mendez is decapitation. And since Kane is in our territoryââ
âItâs not Kane,â I say, my heart thundering in my ears.
âHe took over for his father.â
âHis uncleââ
âHasnât been seen in six months.â
âItâs not Kane.â
âIf you go down to the border towns, Kaneâs name strikes fear in people.â
âThat was his fatherâs doing. He wanted him to take over.â
His lips thin. âIâve got something to show you.â He walks to his car and I meet him again at the hood of mine. He tosses a folder on the hood. âI sat up last night, doing Internet searches to put this together for you after I saw you leave with Kane.â
âI walked down the steps with him,â I say. âI didnât leave with him.â
He flips open the folder and displays a photo of a head on a stick. âThe Mendez Cartelâs work.â He flips to another, where bodies are piled on top of each other. âAlso Mendez.â He goes to flip another, and I shut the file. âEnough.â I inhale and force myself into my Otherworld. âThe sooner we get to the crime scene, the better.â
He stares at me for several hard beats. âIâll meet you at the airport. I need to go have a chat with Kane, and I think we both know itâs inappropriate for you to join me.â
I open my mouth to tell him that Kane would not kill on his home turf, and he considers Manhattan part of that, but even to me, it sounds ridiculous and damning. Instead, I give him a sharp nod. âIâll see you there.â
I leave the folder on the hood of the car and walk to the driverâs side and get in. My brother opens the passenger side and tosses it in the seat before shutting me inside again. He pulls out of the parking lot, and I roll down the window and toss those damn photos.
***
I arrive at the airport, lug my briefcase with me, and walk into the terminal to find Rich waiting on me. âIs it true you dated him?â
I donât ask who heâs talking about or who heâs been talking to. Obviously Eddie is up to no good. âYes.â I walk around him and he falls into step with me.
âAre you in love with him?â
âHe was good in bed,â I say, trying to drive him away.
He grabs my arm. âDonât do that.â
âDo what?â
âThat thing you do to push people away.â
âI have a job to do. Please stop.â
âAre you still seeing him?â
âIâve been gone two years. How can I be seeing him?â
âThe man chopped off someoneâs head.â
âHe did not chop off someoneâs head.â
âYouâre defending him.â
âWeâre done here.â I pull my arm free and start walking, making my way to the door where Andrew is waiting. We fall into step, crossing the tarmac to where the police helicopter is waiting.
âYou arenât going to ask how it went with Kane?â he asks.
âNope.â
âHe says he didnât do it.â
~Because he didnât,~ I think, but I keep my mouth shut and climb into the chopper, with Andrew on my heels, claiming the seat next to me. Iâve just buckled in when Rich steps on board. âWhat are you doing, Rich?â
âI volunteered my services.â
âYouâre a tech guy.â
âAnd a damn good detective.â
He sits down and buckles up directly across from me. I toss the headset I was about to put on and rest my head on the seat, shutting my eyes.
Iâm officially in man-hell, and the one across from me is trying to get killed.