In the Shadow of Evil (14 page)

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Authors: Robin Caroll

BOOK: In the Shadow of Evil
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"This is Homestead Security."

She dropped the towel and forgot all about her painful knees. "Yes?"

"We received an alarm notice from your business system. We tried to contact the location for the password but received no response."

"No one should be in the office."

"Yes, ma'am. Police have been dispatched."

Her blood ran colder than the dropping temperature outside. "T-thank you for letting me know."

"Yes, ma'am. We'll report back after we hear from the police whether it was an actual break-in or not."

Layla's heart started beating again. "So you're not certain there was a break-in."

"No, ma'am. As per procedure, we contacted your secondary number for notification."

"Thank you again." She dropped the phone back to its base and turned to rush out.

Her hosed feet slipped on the hardwood and she fell again. She slapped her hands on the floor.
God, what is going on? Why is this happening to me? Please let the office be okay.

Only the throbbing of her knees answered her.

Using the kitchen metal trash can for support, she pulled herself to standing. She walked down the hallway to her bedroom. At a much slower pace. After a quick change into jeans, sweatshirt, and sneakers, Layla grabbed her keys and headed back into the blistery wind.

She continued to pray on her drive to Taylor Construction. Her heart hammered into her throat. What if someone had read that stupid article in the paper and got ideas? What if someone had broken into the office and set it on fire, like the Hope-for-Homes site? She pressed harder on the accelerator.

Whipping onto the street that the office was on, Layla let out a little sigh. No flames licked the predawn skyline. No firefighters fought a blaze.

There was, however, an Eternal Springs police cruiser in the driveway. The strobing lights sent her heart back into double speed as she parked in front of the front door and jumped out of the truck.

A uniformed officer met her at the door. "Hold it right there, ma'am. Who are you?"

"Layla Taylor. This is my office." She took in the broken window in the front.
Lord, no. Don't let this be something awful.

In a moment another officer joined them. "Ms. Taylor, I'm Assistant Chief Rex Carson and this is Officer Thibodeaux."

"What happened?"

"Looks like someone broke in."

A mountain moved into her gut.

"We think they were looking for something."

"Can I go in?"

Carson shook his head. "This is a crime scene, ma'am. We've called in detectives from the sheriff's office to send over a unit to dust for prints and collect any evidence."

She swallowed against an arid mouth. "How long will that take? I need to know what's missing."

"Ma'am, I'm sure the detectives will want to talk with you, and I imagine they'll want you to walk through with them." Carson nodded toward the cruiser. "You're welcome to sit in the car where it's warm until they get here."

She chewed her bottom lip. This couldn't be happening. "I'll wait in my truck."

A chill that had nothing to do with the January weather crept over her as she climbed into the cab of her vehicle. Her teeth chattered as she gripped her hands tightly together in her lap and hunched over.
Why, God, why? Why this? Why now . . . when everything was starting to go right?

Her knees began to throb, but she ignored the pain, choosing to stare at her office. Two officers stood in the doorway. Guarding it? Had they run someone off? She hadn't even thought to ask. She glanced at the cruiser with its lights still flashing. No one sat in the backseat. Obviously they didn't catch whoever had broken in.

Why would someone break into the office? She didn't keep money in there ever. There was nothing of extreme value, not even tools. She kept her tools in her truck or at the house. There was nothing of worth to anyone in the office, so why break in?

To hurt her, like that stupid article had suggested? Who would do such a thing?

Layla rested her forehead against the steering wheel. Exhaustion weighted down every muscle in her body. It was all too much. First, Randy coming back. She'd closed that part of her life off for good. Or so she thought. But his return flared the hurt and anger she'd buried deep inside. She felt raw.

And now this break-in.

A car engine hummed. She jerked up her head in time to catch an unmarked cruiser sloshing into the space beside her truck. She recognized the driver. And groaned.
Seriously, God?
Could her luck get any worse?

Maddox exited the car. His features were lost in the darkness but not his hulking presence. Detective Wallace stepped in front of the vehicle, its headlights shining on his wild Hawaiian-print shirt. He climbed the stairs and spoke with the officers in the doorway.

She eased open the truck door.

Maddox stood waiting against his car, his arms crossed over his chest, as she joined him. "Good morning, Ms. Taylor."

Something about his casual demeanor set her off. "There's nothing good about it, Detective Bishop."

"True." He pushed off the vehicle and dropped his arms.

"I thought you handled violent crimes or something."

"I do. But when Taylor Construction popped up on the radar, the detective recognized the name as involved in our case, so he called us."

"Involved in your case? How, exactly—?" She shook her head, remembering he thought of her as a suspect. "You know what? Never mind. I don't care. Whatever." She glanced at the doorway. One of the officers and Detective Wallace had disappeared into the office. "Can I go inside now?"

Maddox looked over his shoulder, then back at her. "In just a minute. Houston's taking some photographs of the scene without any contamination."

Contamination? She bit her lip and nodded.

"Can you think of any reason someone would want to break in?"

"No. I don't keep cash or equipment in there."

"Any idea who'd break in? Maybe just to hurt you or your business?"

"None." She worked the clumps of mud with the toe of her sneaker. "I know that article might have given somebody ideas, but I can't think of anyone."

"What about someone who wanted revenge on you?"

She snapped her gaze to meet his. "Revenge for what?"

He shrugged. "Maybe a relationship gone bad?"

"N—" She closed her mouth. Randy was back in town. By the scowl he'd thrown at her earlier, he hated her. Although she couldn't imagine why—he'd been the one who'd left her. And she remembered her conversation with Bob Johnson. He hadn't exactly been friendly. Honestly, he'd been quite bitter.

But that didn't mean either man was involved.

"Layla?"

It wouldn't be fair to name the men without proof of some sort. "No."

Maddox's jaw tightened. "I see."

Detective Wallace emerged from the office. "Layla, you ready to walk through?"

She nodded, then tossed Maddox a final glance before she headed into her office.

Lord, don't let the damage be bad. Please.

THE CHANGE IN LAYLA . . . Maddox shook his head. Gone was the picture-perfect posture. The grace. The intensity in her demeanor.

As he followed her and Houston on the walk-through, all he noticed was the dejection. The brokenness. It was heartbreaking.

No. She was just a person of interest in one of his cases.

But she was now also a victim.

There had to be a connection.

"So, is anything missing?" Houston asked.

"My computers. I had one here in the reception area. Y'all saw it the other day. And one in my office." Her voice was without emotion as she stepped over upturned plants and scattered papers.

"The printer in your office is still there."

She shook her head. "Looks like all they took were the computers and my records." Her voice cracked. Her shoulders slumped. "And trashed the place."

Everything in Maddox wanted to go and hold her. Comfort her.

What? Where did
that
come from? He was a cop. She was a victim of robbery. He had no business thinking about holding or comforting her.

But despite all logic and reasoning, his arms ached to do just that.

Houston made notes, then laid a hand on Layla's forearm.

Her head popped up.

"That's all you can do for now. We have a unit coming that will dust for prints and try to recover any evidence."

Her eyes were glazed over. "Can't I start cleaning up? This is my business."

Houston shook his head. "Not until our unit finishes gathering evidence."

She sagged. Again, Maddox wanted to hold her. He needed to get a grip on himself. Maybe he was coming down with a cold or something.

He'd never been one to be attracted to weaker women. Houston said he used that as an excuse. But Layla Taylor wasn't weak. She was strong. To see her downtrodden because of something that'd happened to her beyond her control . . . well, it made his gut stir in a strange way.

One he wasn't sure he liked.

"Okay. When will that be?" She jutted out her chin as she spoke to Houston. Regaining her stance.

Good for her. A fighter. Not one to roll over and play dead when the bad stuff hit.

"Several hours. Why don't I call you when they're done?" Houston closed his notebook and stuffed it into his back pocket.

"Fine." She turned for the door.

"Layla?" Maddox called out, surprising himself.

She looked over her shoulder at him, the question in her eyes.

"We'll find out who did this."

She hesitated, then gave him a curt nod before leaving.

Houston cleared his throat.

"What?" Maddox asked.

His partner lifted his brows. "Since when do you make promises to find a B&E perp?"

Heat shot up his neck and across his face. "This is connected to our case, and you know it."

Houston laughed. "Yeah, I think so too. But making such a vow?" He continued to chuckle, which annoyed Maddox.

Only because he suspected his partner was on to something: the truth about how he was beginning to feel about Layla Taylor.

"My interviews with Fred Daly and the doctors turned up nothing."

Maddox turned back to his partner. "Odd that someone breaks in and only steals two computers and paperwork, wouldn't you say?"

"Sounds like someone's either looking for something specific or trying to destroy something."

"Because there's a link between LeJeune's murder, the Hope-for-Homes burning, and Taylor Construction."

Maddox nodded, letting his mind wander to come up with viable scenarios. "We already know who all worked on the site. Why destroy records now, if that's what they were after?"

Houston moved down the stairs and leaned on the cruiser. "Maybe the perp didn't know we already had that information."

"Maybe." But it didn't fly with Maddox. "We need to do a background check on Randy Dean. He's someone Layla was involved with who left town but has returned. Recently."

Houston's cell phone went off. He glanced at the caller ID. "Margie." He flipped open the phone. "What's wrong?"

Maddox tried not to stare, but his partner's face paled and he stared at Maddox. "Okay. I'll let him know." Houston closed the phone and shoved it back into his belt clip.

"What?"

"It's your dad."

THIRTEEN

"The value of a man should be seen in what he gives and not in what he is able to receive."

—ALBERT EINSTEIN

HE'D KEPT HIS SECRET safe.

Although he hadn't wanted to hurt Layla, he'd destroyed everything. Her records . . . her documents . . . even her personal notes.

The act gave him a measure of comfort. He'd protected himself and his family. Now the police could try to reconstruct all the information, but they wouldn't see the connection. They wouldn't figure it out. No one could.

Except Layla Taylor.

And maybe the break-in would be enough to keep her busy. Keep her from digging. She was the one person who could assemble the details and have it make sense. But if she had other things keeping her occupied . . .

He liked her. Admired her. Respected her. Appreciated that she was a good contractor and a good businesswoman.

But if he had to, he'd take more drastic measures. His own future depended on Layla not figuring it out. Not seeing the connection.

He'd play it by ear. See what she did. Maybe she'd confide in him a little about the investigation. That'd be nice—knowing where the police were in the case.

It might come down to him having to act further. Do something else to get Layla to lay off the searching. Not for the money, even though that's what he stood to gain. But his own preservation. And a future with his kids.

He would do everything he could to avoid hurting Layla. She'd always been nice to him. Treated him with respect.

Her father had been inspiring. Honorable. A good, good man.

If need be, he'd send Layla another message. But not hurt her. That would only be a last resort.

Feeling better about the situation and himself, he dumped Layla's computers into the bayou. The dark water bubbled as the machines sank, welcoming them to their new home. They'd never be found, but even if they were, he'd beaten them with a baseball bat earlier. No way could anybody retrieve anything off of them. Not even the FBI tech geeks.

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