I'll Never Let You Go (Morgans of Nashville) (18 page)

BOOK: I'll Never Let You Go (Morgans of Nashville)
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“Have at it.” Ray wiggled his toes but didn’t bother to rise.
Alex shook his head. “Stand up. Put your foot up on a chair.”
Ray grinned. “Don’t want to kneel before the dragon lord?”
Alex’s expression remained stoic.
With a shrug, Ray rose from the chair, settled his foot on an ottoman, and lifted his silk pants leg. Alex moved forward and inspected the monitoring device. “It looks intact.” He stepped back. “No signs of tampering.”
“Mind telling me why you’re checking?” Ray settled back against the chair cushions.
“Don’t you have a girlfriend, Ray? I think her name is Kendra?” Deke asked.
Eyes darkened with suspicion. “Kendra. Why do you want to know about Kendra?”
“Where is she?”
“New York. Shopping for my birthday present.” He rolled his shoulders, muscles flexing with a portion of an elaborate tiger tattoo. “No, wait. She’s in protective custody. That cop got her and she flipped on me.”
“Funny you should mention that detective. She was killed Sunday.”
Ray tsked as he glanced at buffed fingernails. “Damn, that’s too bad. What was her name again?”
“Deidre Jones. From what I hear, Deidre got Kendra to wear a wire. Those tapes are what got you in trouble.”
A smile quirked his lips. “My lawyer isn’t so sure about that. This case is no slam dunk for the cops.”
“That’s not what I heard. I also heard you were pissed and threatened to kill Detective Jones and anyone who talked to her.”
“I don’t recall anything like that.” Ray’s smile widened and a gold tooth flashed. “And last I heard, Kendra is alive and well. Besides, I have no hard feelings for Kendra.” He touched his fingertips to his breastbone. “I love her.”
Deke shook his head. “Kendra’s lucky a guy like you is so forgiving.”
“That’s what I told her,” Ray said.
“You forgive the cop that got her to wear the wire?”
Dark eyes glinted before he smiled. “Deidre Jones is nothing to me.”
“If we can believe that anklet, you didn’t kill her, but maybe you sent someone to do your dirty work. Maybe you told your guy to mess her up bad . . . send a message to Kendra.”
“I don’t care about a damn detective. And Kendra and I’ve gone our separate ways. Alive or dead, she makes no difference to me. You said she was messed up. How was it done? How was she killed?”
Deke’s tone deepened. “Stabbed.”
Ray shook his head. “That’s got to hurt. Hell of a way to go.”
Alex kept his voice low, even. “You like knives, don’t you, Ray?”
He nodded, shrugged. “I do like them. But I didn’t kill your detective. And I don’t know who did.”
Deke’s headlights shone bright on the rental car parked in the lot by the running trail. He pulled up beside the four door and checked his watch. “Hell of a place and time to meet.”
“She and Deidre talked about this place. She knew Deidre loved it here. She wanted to see it and I didn’t want another night to pass without talking to her.”
Deke pointed toward a bench where a lone woman sat, staring at the park. “Deidre’s sister, Joy?”
“That would be my guess.”
Neither liked rehashing the details of the detective’s death, and interviewing loved ones who’d lost family always left a sour taste. “Let’s do this.”
They found Joy Martin sitting on the bench, her hands resting in her lap as she stared down the path. It was as if she were trying to picture Deidre’s last steps on the path. She wore a midweight overcoat suitable for California but not nearly adequate for the cold nights here. Long hair draped her narrow shoulders. Silver rings decorated long fingers. She tapped a nervous high-heeled foot.
Alex pulled his badge from his pocket. “Ms. Martin.”
Joy looked up with brittle green eyes that reminded him of Deidre. “You must be Agent Morgan.”
He tucked the badge back in his breast pocket. “Yes, ma’am. We spoke on the phone. This is Detective Deke Morgan. He’s with Nashville Homicide.”
“Two Morgans?”
“We’re brothers, ma’am.”
“Ah.” Nodding, she turned her gaze back to the woods. “She mentioned you both a few times. Frankly, I don’t think she liked either of you.”
“I’m not the most likable guy,” Alex said. “And neither is Deke.” He kept his tone soft.
Deke nodded. “We won’t win any popularity contests.”
Joy looked up at Deke, a wistful expression in her gaze. “She said you were one of the best detectives she ever worked with. She respected you.”
He moved toward the bench but didn’t sit, as if he were breaching a hallowed space. “I’m trying to find out what happened.” He avoided using the words
killed
or
died
. The words triggered hard emotions that muddied clear thinking.
She rose and stood almost as tall as Deidre. Her shoulders weren’t as wide, but her body was equally lean. “You know she was getting a divorce.”
“Yes.”
“It wasn’t friendly.” She slid her hands into her pockets. “Tyler didn’t want to let go.”
“She didn’t talk about her personal life. But I’ve since learned the divorce was rough.”
“No, she wouldn’t want anyone at the office to know. She loved her job and never wanted anything to tarnish her reputation.” She turned from the path in the woods. “She was dating again. A guy named David. I met David once. Struck me as lots of fun and no substance, but a step up from Tyler.”
“I understand you and Tyler weren’t close.”
“No, we’re not. In fact, Deidre and I had grown distant because of him. I don’t like him. She was too good for him. It was only after they separated that we reconnected.”
“Anything unusual going on with your sister that you know of?”
She twisted a silver ring on her index finger. “She was really rattled the last time we spoke. I asked her what was going on, but she wouldn’t tell me. Said it had to do with a case.”
“She mention anything about the case?” Deke asked.
“She just said she’d made a mistake and now she was going to have to fix the problem so that she could move on with her life.”
“A mistake?” Alex asked.
Sins of the past
; David’s words echoed.
The sister nodded. Tears filled her eyes and a few escaped down her cheek. She swiped them away. “I think it had to do with me.”
“You?”
“I got into trouble five years ago, when I was in college in Nashville. I was arrested for dealing. I was holding a lot when they caught me. Enough that I faced felony charges. I was in a panic. The arresting officer told me I could go to prison for twenty years. I called my sister as soon as they offered me a phone. Deidre had just made detective in Vice.”
Good cops went bad for a lot of reasons. Sometimes it was money or greed. Sometimes the motivations were cold and calculating. “You told Deidre about the dealing?”
“Yes. I told her I was scared. I told her the local cops had evidence that would put me away for years. I cried. Deidre didn’t say anything for a long, long time. She then asked if I’d be willing to go to rehab if she helped me.”
“Did you agree?” Alex asked.
“I swore I would. Of course I’d sworn before, but in that moment, I really meant it.”
Tension banded in Alex’s chest as he wondered what he’d do to help a sibling.
“Deidre said she would help me. She asked for the arresting officer’s name. And I gave it to her.”
“What happened?”
Joy threaded her fingers together. “She told me to sit tight. She’d call me soon.”
“And she came through?” Alex asked.
“Yeah. She came through. About five hours later, she told me the evidence was gone. I was free. She drove me straight to rehab and I stayed for sixty days.” She raised her chin. “I haven’t used since.”
“Why do you think this relates to her death?” Deke asked.
“Like I said, Deidre was upset when we were talking on the phone. She was actually afraid of a past mistake. I asked her about it, and when she wouldn’t answer, I knew it had to do with my arrest. She was so by the book. She wouldn’t have bent the rules, except for me.”
“And she told you she was going to fix this problem?” Alex asked.
“Yes. I asked Deidre how, but she told me not to worry about it. I asked her if there were anything I could do, and she said she’d figure it out. Said not to worry. She was gonna kill two birds with one stone. Said not to worry.”
“Do you know what that means?”
“I don’t know. I wish I did. I might have been able to save her.” She glanced toward the park, as if wondering where her sister would be if she’d taken a different path.
Did it all go back to Joy’s case and the missing evidence? “Do you remember the name of the arresting officer?”
“Yeah. I’ll never forget it. Philip Latimer.”
 
 
Alex had returned to his office immediately and done a search on Philip Latimer. It couldn’t be a coincidence that Latimer had been married to Leah, and Deidre had sought Leah out. Pieces of the puzzle didn’t quite connect, but they had moved closer.
It didn’t take much digging for Latimer’s name to pop. He’d been a cop in Nashville for eight years, and he’d served with distinction. He’d also been disciplined after his estranged wife had filed stalking charges against him. According to statements, Latimer had sworn he’d lay off the wife. Tensions had appeared to ease, and then Latimer had broken into his wife’s apartment and tried to stab her to death. He’d eluded the cops and gotten out of Tennessee. He’d died in a car accident three weeks later in South Carolina.
How had Latimer gotten out of town? Did he have help?
Deidre had said she’d clean up her sister’s legal mess. Had she’d figured she’d approach Latimer and ask for a favor?
Alex had no proof that Deidre had ever contacted Latimer, but a connection was logical. Another puzzle piece.
Several calls to the Nashville Police Department earned him the files that detailed Leah’s stabbing. Within an hour, he was staring at the graphic images of her bedroom sprayed bright red with her blood. It could have been Deidre’s crime scene.
Leah. Nervous around people. No damn wonder.
He had seen his share of Philip Latimers in the world. Fucked-up bullies who preyed on the vulnerable. Manipulation began with guilt, then harsh words, physical abuse and, all too often, murder.
He was sorry the guy had died in the car accident. It would have been a pleasure to deal with him personally.
He dialed dispatch and left word for the officer who’d responded to Leah’s attack to call back. He wanted to talk. An hour later, Alex’s phone rang.
“Officer Boyle,” Alex said. He reached across his desk and pulled over a legal-size pad for notes. “What can you tell me about the Leah Carson Latimer case? It was a domestic violence attack. Four years ago. The attacker was a Nashville cop. Philip Latimer.”
“Shit. That was a long time ago, but I don’t think I’ll ever forget it.” He sighed. “The husband worked for the county as a patrol officer. I even crossed paths with him a few times. Seemed like a good guy.”
“When did the stalking start?”
“Right after they separated.”
“According to her complaints, it was unrelenting.”
“It was. And she filed for a restraining order against him. Of course we’d been notified, but when Latimer’s boss talked to him, he swore he’d back off. And he did for a few days.” Another sigh full of regrets. “We shouldn’t have believed him. She’d made such a good case with her journaling. Great eye for detail. Never had a victim keep such detailed records.” A chair squeaked in the background, as if he leaned back. “I heard Latimer died in a car accident.”
“That’s what his wife told me.”
“So why the call?”
“His name came up in another case. Apparently, he crossed paths with Deidre Jones a few years ago.”
“The detective who was stabbed?”
“Yeah.”
“That doesn’t make sense. Like I said, he’s dead.”
“Did Latimer have any friends or family that would have resented Leah Carson for filing charges?”
“There were some officers in his department who didn’t believe her. Latimer did a good job of painting her as hysterical and unstable. But when he stabbed her, well, there was little to argue. All his support was immediately withdrawn after that.”
“You sure he didn’t have any faithful followers?”
“None that hit my radar. I can ask around. Where’s Leah Latimer—I mean, Carson?”
“She’s back in Nashville. Works as a vet.”
“How’s she doing?”
“She’s doing well.”
A heavy silence lingered. “That’s good. She was a mess after the attack. Hell of a lot of rehab. But from what I heard, she was pretty determined to get on with her life.”
He thought about her running through the park in the early morning rain. One foot in front of the other. “Is there anyone who knew her then that I could talk to? Anyone who would have known her or Philip during that time?”

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