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Shelter in Place by Nora Roberts (14)

Rick Wagman got sixty days, a revoked driver’s license (not his first drinking and driving rodeo), and mandatory rehab. Since adultery wasn’t a crime, Reed decided it was a suitable punishment for being a drunk asshole.

April arrived with a two-day snow. Plows plowed, shovels shoveled while the dawn of spring took the island back to midwinter. Then the sun burst out, popping the temperature toward fifty degrees. The rapid snowmelt gurgled its way into forming streams, chewing potholes into asphalt, swamping the beaches.

Reed spent the lion’s share of his first three weeks on the job dealing with weather-related incidents. Off-hours he made himself visible in the village, walking or biking around the island, often with CiCi, Simone, or both. He spent as many nights as he could manage with Simone in his bed.

And dedicated at least an hour every evening to Patricia Hobart.

On his day off in mid-April, he ferried to Portland. He hadn’t persuaded Simone to join him. Probably shouldn’t have mentioned meeting his parents, he realized.

He drove off the ferry, stopped to buy flowers, ended up choosing a madly blue hydrangea bush instead. Rethought, bought three.

His parents weren’t his only visit on this spring Sunday.

He had brunch with his family, played with the kids, bullshitted with his brother, teased his sister, more or less helped his father plant the well-received hydrangea.

And took away an enormous care package of leftovers.

At his next stop he found Leticia Johnson sitting on her front porch potting up pansies. She brushed off her garden gloves when he pulled up.

He thought it amazing she looked exactly the same as she had the night he’d met her.

He glanced across the street, thought the same couldn’t be said.

The landlord had indeed sold the lot. The new owners had razed what was left of the house, built a nice little place—currently a soft blue with white trim. They’d added a porch, a concrete walkway, a short, blacktop driveway, some foundation plants.

Next door, Rob’s and Chloe’s fixer-upper had long since been fixed up into a pretty two-story in a sage green with the addition of a garage on the far side and a bonus room topping it.

He knew they’d added another kid, too.

He pulled the hydrangea out of the car, walked toward Leticia’s welcoming smile.

“Aren’t you a fine sight on a sunny day.”

“Not as fine as you.” He bent down to kiss her cheek. “I hope you like hydrangeas.”

“I surely do.”

“Then pick your spot, and tell me where I can find a shovel.”

She wanted it right in front, where she could see it when she sat on her porch. While he dug, she went in the house, came back out with a plastic container.

“Coffee grounds, some orange peels I haven’t taken out to the compost yet. You bury these with the roots, boy. They’ll help keep the blooms blue.”

“You’d like my father. I just delivered one there, and he said just the same. What do you know about lupines?”

They talked gardening, though most of it was like a foreign language to him.

After, he sat on the porch with her, drinking iced tea, eating cookies.

“You look healthy and happy. Island life agrees with you.”

He hadn’t forgotten she’d come to see him at the hospital—twice. “It really does. I hope you’ll come over sometime, let me show you around. We can sit on my porch.”

“What you need is a pretty young woman sitting there with you.”

“I’m working on it.”

“Well, praise be.”

“How are the neighbors doing?”

She looked across the street as he did. “Chloe and Rob and their two girls are doing fine. Sweet family. We’ve got new ones right across now, in that poor woman’s place.”

“Oh?”

“The family who built the house there—and it’s a nice house, too—they just outgrew it. Young couple in there now, expecting their first next fall. Nice as nice can be. I took them over an apple pie to say welcome, and didn’t they ask me right in, show me around? And the night before trash day every week, he and Rob, they take turns coming over here to take my bins down to the curb.”

“I’m glad to hear that.”

“You’re still thinking about what was.”

“She’s still out there.”

With a shake of her head, Leticia rubbed the cross she wore around her neck. “A person who’d kill her own mama, kill her grandparents, that’s not a person at all. It’s something else that doesn’t even have a name.”

“I have a lot of names for her. I know you didn’t talk to her much, but you saw her, Ms. Leticia. Coming and going. I’m looking for patterns, and breaks in them.”

“Like we’ve talked about, she’d drive up with groceries, stay awhile. Mother’s Day, Christmas, she’d bring something. Never looked happy about it.”

“Did she ever change her look—like her hair, her style?”

“Not to speak of. But now, I did see her once in one of those outfits the girls exercise in. Like for the gym or running around. Wasn’t her usual morning, and she looked downright annoyed. I have to say she had a better figure than I’d have guessed.”

“She ran most mornings. We’ve verified that. Interesting.”

“Now that I think on it, I’m putting that at a time her mama took sick.”

“Could be Marcia Hobart called Patricia, nagged her into coming by before, and Patricia didn’t bother to change from her morning run.”

“Now you’re putting me in mind of something else.” Leticia tapped a finger on her knee. “She didn’t look any different that day, or act it all that much, but maybe it’s a break in the pattern, like you say.”

She rocked, eyes closed, trying to bring it back.

“Wintertime—I can’t say just when. But the young ones were building me a snowman right out here, and thinking of the ages, I’m guessing five or six years ago this was. My grandson—the police, you know—was shoveling off my steps, my walk, and he was wearing the scarf I made him and gave him for Christmas, so it was after that. I was out here supervising—brought the young ones a carrot for the snowman’s nose—and she drove up.”

She opened her eyes again, nodding as she looked at Reed. “I could tell she was annoyed right off when she got out because the walk over there hadn’t been done. I called out to her, asked if she wanted one of my kids to do some shoveling, as the girl who did for her was down sick with the flu.”

Leticia rocked awhile, nodding again. “I’m remembering now. I walked over while I talked, seems to me, and she ducked her head as she usually did. I just took the bull by the balls, told my grandson to go on over there, shovel off that walk for the lady, told the oldest of the young ones to go get those groceries.”

“How’d she handle it?”

“She was kind of stuck, wasn’t she? She needed the help, and help was already moving in. I said how it looked like she’d gotten some sun—as it did, I recall. She said she’d taken a little vacation. My boy’s shoveling her walk, the young one’s carting the two bags of groceries up to the little porch, so she’s stuck, and plainly irritated. She said she hated coming back to winter, wished she could spend all her winters in Florida.”

“She said ‘Florida’ specifically?”

“She did. They had sun and palm trees and swimming pools in Florida, and here we had snow and ice and cold. I suppose that’s the most she said to me in our whole acquaintance, so I said it was nice she got a holiday, and where in Florida did she go? She just mumbled about having to get inside to her mother, and went off. Now, she did stop and offer to pay my grandson, still shoveling, but he wouldn’t take any money. He’s raised better.”

“She killed a woman in Tampa, February of 2011.”

“Well, my sweet Lord. Her vacation tan hadn’t yet faded, so this couldn’t have been long after. She’d gotten a tan while taking a life and stood over there bitching about the snow. Do you think she went to Florida again after she shot you?”

“No, I think she went up to Canada. I shot her—she left a blood trail. And she had to move fast.”

“She had time to kill her own grandparents.” Her fingers reached for her cross again. “Rest their souls.”

“She hated them, like she hated her mother. And she had to be hurting. Why not take it out on them? But she was hurting, and I don’t see her trying to drive all the way to Florida with a gunshot wound. Canada’s closer. Fresh ID, over the border, dig a hole, and hide. She had plenty of cash, we figure, and credit cards under fake IDs. But I think she’s in Florida now. She had a good time there.”

He glanced back at Letitia. “And I think two of her targets are living there now.”

“You’ve got to warn them, Reed. Don’t say how the FBI’s in charge. Those people should have a chance to take precautions, protect themselves.”

After he kissed her goodbye, Leticia watched him drive off. She worried about that boy. The person who wasn’t a person but something so bad she didn’t have a name for it in her vocabulary had tried to kill him once. Surely he knew she’d try again. She had to pray, and she would, that he was smart enough, and good police enough to catch her before she did.

*   *   *

Essie looked dumbfounded when Reed offered her a hydrangea. “You should plant it with coffee grounds for reasons that make no sense to me. I’ll trade you the plant for a beer.”

“It’s a nice plant. Hank!” she called out. “Reed brought us a plant.”

Dylan and Puck came first, on the run.

“My man.” Reed slapped high fives with the boy, bent down to rub the wagging dog.

“Are we going to the island? Can we go right now?”

“Gotta hold off on that.”

“Aw! Me and Puck wanna go!”

Reed hauled him up. “Not much longer. When you come, I’m making you and Puck the Pug deputies for the day.”

“With badges?”

“Can’t be a deputy without one. Hey, Hank.”

“Reed. That’s a nice hydrangea. Nikko Blue. Needs acidic soil to keep it that way.”

“Then I’m passing it to the guy who knows.”

He had a beer with Hank, admired Dylan’s Power Rangers action figures and dinosaurs. Hank caught the subtle signal between his wife and her former partner.

“Hey, Dylan, let’s go dig a hole. I’ve got just the spot.”

“Another beer?” Essie asked after her men went outside to dig.

“No, thanks. I’ve got to catch the ferry back and don’t have much time. I stopped by to talk to Leticia Johnson,” he began and relayed the new information.

“We always knew she went to Florida, Reed.”

“That’s right. But I think something about it caught her. She talked about it, and she usually made a point of saying next to nothing. She mentioned it—and the woman at the bakery where she used to stop in the mornings? She said Hobart told her she was taking a few days at a health spa in the mountains.”

“She’s a liar, which we already know, too. But you’ve got a point. She slipped. She was pissed off,” Essie decided. “Just back from sun and palm trees, and now she’s got snow and cold, and nobody’s shoveled the damn walk.”

“Ms. Leticia had her sort of cornered for a minute, so she let go a little, bitched a little.”

“Why would it matter really, what she said to some nosy old woman in her mother’s neighborhood? She’s irritated with the snow, irritated the kid hadn’t shoveled it, fresh off a kill. Yeah.” Essie nodded. “She slipped.”

“She’s in Florida, Essie. I know it.”

“Reed, we’ve got no trail leading there.”

“Two targets, and it’s been a cold winter.” He pushed up, paced. “What did you think when you saw this house, when you bought it?”

“Here’s home.”

“Yeah, and I felt the same about mine. She lived with her grandparents, and hated them—with her mother before, same thing. She killed them all. Those places were never home for her. I’m betting she thinks Florida is. She comes out of Canada—and even the feds believe she holed up there—and hits Bermuda. You know what I think?”

Nodding, Essie puffed out her cheeks. “It reminded her she loves sun and palm trees.”

“Exactly. We figured south already, and I’ve been leaning toward Florida. Now I’m damn sure of it. I know it’s gut, Essie, but it fits.”

“I can trickle this to the special agent in charge.”

“Not if it brings heat on you.”

“Are they getting there? No, they’re not. And she’s added to the body count. I’ll go through channels. Look, Sloop knows you keep in touch with his grandmother, and he can verify. You went by to check in on her—”

“Took her a hydrangea, planted it.”

“So much the better. And she hands you this new conversation. You passed it to me. I pass it up the chain. Simple as that.”

“Okay. As the person who gathered the information, and as a chief of police sworn to protect and serve, I’m contacting the two likely targets.”

“Reed—”

“It’ll take time for the feds to process what you pass up, and even then we can’t know what action they might take. I’m contacting them, Essie. What can they do to me?”

“Maybe not a lot, if anything.”

“They can’t slap at you if I make the contacts.”

“The contact might have more weight coming from me, a detective on the Portland PD.”

“Detective, chief.” He grinned at her. “Come on.”

“Smart-ass.”

“I’m telling you because we’ve never bullshitted each other, and I don’t want you hearing it after the fact. I’ve gotta go.”

He moved to the window first, looked out. “Man, boy, and dog. It’s a nice picture.”

“My favorite. I’m pregnant.”

“Huh?” He spun around. “Seriously? Why didn’t you say so right off? It’s good, right?”

“It’s a lot more than good. I’m only about seven and a half weeks, and you’re not really supposed to say before you hit twelve. But…”

She looked out the window with troubled eyes. “I’m going to have two kids. Hank found an agent who’s going to shop his book around, and by God, he’s already started another. He’s happy writing, staying home. I’m happy. Dylan’s just full of happy. I want the bitch caught, Reed. Sooner or later she’ll come after me, too. I’m the one who killed her brother.”

“We’re going to get her, Essie.”

“She doesn’t target families. They don’t interest her. But now, I’ve got family inside me.”

“Get the word out. Don’t wait for the twelve weeks. Look, I think you’re high on her list—no bullshitting between us—so it’s too soon for her to come after you. But knowing you’re pregnant might hold her back if she’s bumped you up.”

“That’s not a bad thought.” Because it had tensed up, she rubbed the back of her neck under her short ponytail. “I can let it get out. She came after you, and you were the second nine-one-one caller.”

“The second doesn’t matter. I didn’t bring the cops. Simone did. Simone,” he added, “who I’m crazy in love with.”

“You—” Essie managed to get her jaw off the floor. “Now it’s my turn. Seriously?”

“As serious as it gets. It’s either you or Simone on the top of her list. No way she’s getting to either of you.”

“Is she in love with you?”

“I’m working on it. I’ve gotta go.”

“But it’s just getting interesting. How are you working on it?”

“Come to the island, see for yourself,” he said as she followed him to the door. “I can’t miss the ferry. I’m the chief of police.”

*   *   *

On the ferry, Reed made the calls. He spoke to Max Lowen in Fort Lauderdale, identified himself, and said that during a tangential investigation he’d gathered information that caused him to believe Patricia Hobart might be in Florida.

After scaring the crap out of Lowen, Reed spoke of basic precautions, asked relevant questions, gave Lowen his cell number, and suggested he pass that to local law enforcement and contact the SAC at the FBI. He’d be happy to speak with them and verify.

With Emily Devlon, he got an answering machine, left his name, number, and asked her to contact him as soon as possible about information on Patricia Hobart.

Then he got out of his car, watched the island slide into view.

Home, he thought. Where the heart is.

He pulled out his phone again, texted Simone.

On the ferry, about five minutes out. I’m thinking about picking up a pizza and spending some time watching the sunset on the patio with a couple of beautiful women.

She answered back.

CiCi’s making what she calls Vegetable Soup For The Ages. And she roped me into kneading bread dough, so no need for pizza. It’s too chilly for sunset on the patio. We’ll sit by the fire instead.

Deal. Nearly home.

He slid his phone back in his pocket. He’d try Emily Devlon again in the morning if she didn’t give him a call back. But for now he put it away.

*   *   *

Emily heard the phone ring as she closed the kitchen door behind her. She hesitated a moment, nearly went back to answer, then kept going. With her husband and kids already off for a little beach time and pizza, she wouldn’t worry about it. If Kent needed her, he’d have called her cell.

They had the landline because Kent wanted one for clients and messages. So it had to be a client or another annoying political call or solicitation.

Besides, this was her night. Her girls’ night out disguised as a book club, the first and third Sundays of the month—she ran one and just participated in the second. And tonight, she wasn’t in charge.

She stepped into the garage—one her husband never used, as he had it so packed with sports equipment, tools, and lawn crap, it barely had room for her car.

She heard a sound, felt a burning flood of pain.

Then heard and felt nothing.

Patricia opened Emily’s purse, flipped through her contacts to one of the names on the committee. Texted:

Something came up, explain later. Can’t make it. Boo!

In the event a neighbor looked out, Patricia adjusted her wig—same style and color as Emily’s. She took Emily’s keys, slid into the minivan, hit the garage control.

She drove through the neighborhood, out again, took a direct route to the open-air shopping center a convenient mile and a half away, and parked.

She ditched the wig in her oversize purse with the gun, fluffed up her hair—screw DNA, she wanted them to know she’d won again.

She strolled through the mall, basking in the balmy spring evening. Man, she loved Florida! She window-shopped, picked up a couple of things, and walked back to her own car, parked there before she’d taken the mile and a half hike to kill Emily.

Her bags were already in the cargo area.

She let out a sigh. She hated leaving Florida, wished she could stay and just bask awhile. But she had places to go, people to kill.

“Road trip!” she said with a laugh. She opened the bag of jalapeño chips, the Diet Pepsi she’d picked up for the drive. Turned the satellite radio up.

As she drove away, she decided Emily Devlon had been her easiest kill yet.

Her luck was in.

*   *   *

Her luck held. Emily’s husband didn’t check the garage when he got home. He had no reason to. The kids—hyped up from pizza, and the ice cream he’d been weak enough to indulge them in after—kept him busy and distracted. He didn’t expect his wife home until at least ten in any case.

He let the kids go crazy in the tub because they made him laugh even if it did mean some serious mopping up before Mom got home.

He read them a story, tucked them in, mopped up, got what he considered a very well-earned vodka tonic. He didn’t check the machine, never thought of it, and fell asleep in the sixth inning of the baseball game on the bedroom TV.

He woke just after midnight, disoriented, then more puzzled than annoyed when he found himself alone in bed.

He shut off the TV, went into the bathroom to pee. Yawning, he checked on the kids and peeked into the guest room where Emily sometimes slept when he snored.

He went downstairs, called for her.

Annoyance flipped over puzzlement. House rule, he thought, for both of them: If you’re going to be late, you call.

He reached for his phone, remembered he’d stuck it in the charger beside the bed. He went into his office, off the living area, to use the landline, saw the blinking message light.

He tapped for it, frowned. Why the hell was some police chief from an island off of Portland … He heard Hobart’s name, and felt his blood run cold.

He called her cell, felt sick when he heard her cheery voice-mail message. “Call me. Call me, Emily. Right now.”

He paced, back and forth, telling himself she was fine. Just had too many glasses of Pinot, that’s all. She was fine.

But he went out, checked the pool, the hot tub.

Took a shaky breath of relief.

He didn’t even think of the garage, or her car, for nearly ten minutes. He wobbled between relieved and shaky when he didn’t see her car.

Then he found her.

*   *   *

Reed didn’t get the call—from a Homicide cop—until three in the morning. He grabbed the phone, rolled up to sit on what he remembered was Simone’s bed instead of his.

“Quartermaine.”

“Chief Quartermaine, Tranquility Island, Maine?”

“Yeah. Who’s this?”

“Detective Sylvio, Coral Gables PD. I got your name and contact number off a message machine—”

“Emily Devlon.” He held on to hope for ten seconds. “Did she contact you?”

“No, Chief Quartermaine.”

“Are you Homicide?”

“That would be affirmative.”

“Goddamn it, goddamn it. When? How?”

“We’re working on that. I’ve got some questions.”

“Ask them.” He shoved open the door, walked out on the long terrace overlooking the water. He needed air.

Simone turned on the lights. She felt that air, a strong, chilly flow of it, rush into the room. She got up, put on a robe, walked to the open door to see Reed standing naked in some fitful moonlight, snapping answers into his phone.

He didn’t feel the cold, she realized. Not with all that rage burning off him. She’d never seen him angry—hadn’t been sure he ever got there. At least not raging.

He didn’t rage now, but the rage was in there.

She listened because after he snapped out answers, he snapped out questions. Obviously the answers didn’t satisfy him.

“Give me a break, Detective. Give me a fucking break. She might be alive if I’d made that call sooner, if I’d connected with her. Because it’s Hobart, goddamn it. She’ll have stalked in person, through social media. She’ll have a place—or had one—within an easy walk or drive. She’ll know Emily Devlon’s routine. Where she shops, banks, drinks, eats. She’ll have documented every last detail. Did Devlon routinely go out on Sunday nights?”

Reed shoved at his hair, paced.

“For fuck’s sake, call the FBI. The SAC is Andrew Xavier. But right now you’re standing over a dead mother of two. I was there with her in the DownEast Mall. I didn’t know her, but I was in there, too. And I … Jesus fucking Christ, are you trying to be a dick? Then give me TOD, and I’ll tell you where the fuck I was.

“I was at the home of my former partner and her family. That’s Detective Essie McVee.” He rattled off her phone number and address. “She’ll verify. I left her place, drove to the ferry back to Tranquility. I contacted Emily Devlon, left the message while on the ferry. Prior, I contacted Max Lowen in Fort Lauderdale, as I believed Hobart to be in Florida. The message has a time stamp, goddamn it, you know damn well I called her right before or right after TOD.”

He listened and, oh yes, Simone could see that rage in every line and muscle of his body.

“You do that. Fucking do that. You know where to reach me.”

He spun around, and the wild fury on his face had Simone taking a step back. He caught himself.

“I need a minute.”

But when he reached for the door, to close it between them, she stepped forward.

“Don’t do that. Don’t shut me out. I heard enough to understand she killed someone else. Someone you tried to warn. Come in, Reed, put some clothes on. You don’t know it yet, but you’re freezing.”

“A lot of fucking good it did. She didn’t answer the phone. Maybe already dead. Too fucking late.” He tossed his phone on the bed, grabbed his pants. “And this Homicide asshole’s grilling me about why I left the message, why I left the Portland PD, how I know so much, where I was during the time in question. Fucking cocksucker.”

He caught himself again. “Sorry. I have to go.”

“To do what? Put your fist through a wall somewhere else? Once the fucking cocksucker does a minimum of checking, he’s going to know he’s a fucking cocksucker.”

“That won’t make Emily Devlon any less dead. She had two little kids. I was too late.”

She moved to him, wrapped around him.

“Damn it, Simone. I was too late. She got by me.”

“You?” She squeezed hard, eased back. “Why you, and you alone?”

“I’m the only one she’s tried to kill who’s looked her in the eyes and lived.”

“So you’re not going to stop. Right now you don’t think that counts for much, but it does. I predict the cop in Florida will call you back, apologize, and ask for your help.”

“I don’t want his fucking apology.”

“You’re probably going to get it anyway. But now, we’re going to take a walk on the beach.”

“It’s cold, it’s the middle of the damn night. I need to go,” he insisted. “You should go back to bed.”

Odd, she thought, he usually held on to his calm. Now that his had slipped, she had a good grip on her own.

“You’re going to wait until I get dressed, then we’re going to walk. It’s something that helps me, at least sometimes, when I’m really pissed off. Let’s see if it helps you.”

She went to her dresser for a sweatshirt, sweatpants. “Seeing you in full-blown rage? I realize just how lucky the island is to have you.”

“Yeah, nothing like a pissed-off chief of police.”

“You have a right to be pissed, and still, already, you’re banking it down. And part of the pissed, the part that’s still showing, is sad. I knew you were smart and clever as a cop. I knew you respected the job you do, and want to do it well. And I knew you cared about people, but tonight I saw just how much you care.”

She got a scarf, wound it around her neck. “We’re lucky to have you, Chief. I’ve got a warm jacket downstairs. We’ll get it, and yours, on the way out.”

“I’m in love with you. Dear Christ, don’t let that scare you off.”

It stole her breath for a minute, and she had to take a firmer grip on her calm. “It scares me. It’s not scaring me off, but I need a little more gathering myself together before I’m sure what we’re going to do about it. I’ve never felt about anyone the way I feel about you. I just need to figure that out.”

“That works for me. And I’m less pissed off now.”

“Let’s take that walk anyway. You’re the first man who’s said that to me I’ve believed. I think we both need a walk on the beach.”

It helped, and though he didn’t go back in, back to her bed, she knew he’d steadied himself. He kissed her, drove away after he waited for her to go inside.

She didn’t go back to her bed, either. Instead, she made a large cup of coffee, went to her studio.

There she found the sketch of Emily Devlon she’d made from the photo on Reed’s board. And gathering her tools, began to do what she could to honor the dead.