Whisper Of Warning - Whisper Of Warning Part 25
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Whisper Of Warning Part 25

Fine. She'd offered herself to this man twice now, and she wasn't going to do it again.

She reached into the back and collected her shopping bags. She pushed open the door, and he caught her arm.

She glanced back at him. He didn't say anything, but his look was intense.

"What?" she asked.

"Be careful."

"I am."

And then he let her go.

Courtney spent Tuesday morning in a cranky mood, partly because she'd had a lousy night's sleep, but mostly because of Will. Despite her protests, he'd insisted on taxiing her to work again, which had made for an awkward car ride and an even more awkward good-bye. Courtney had opted for silence, and Will had gone with a brief nod and a "take care" as she'd climbed out of the truck.

She tried to work off her bitchiness with her scissors. Her 10:30 client had long, layered tresses that required lots of snipping and a twenty-minute blow-dry. And she didn't talk much, thank God. Courtney was in no mood to play therapist.

As she swept up for her 11:30, her thoughts returned to the baseball game. She couldn't stop thinking about what Will had said.

Had David revealed something to her that could explain all this? She'd been scouring her memories, trying to come up with some conversation in which he'd given her a clue about some shady deal he was mixed up in. But he hadn't talked much about his business. He'd told her a little about the trial he was working on, but it had all been pretty high level. It was some diet pill lawsuit. Courtney remembered, because he'd asked her if she'd ever used the drug, and he'd looked disappointed when she'd said no.

How had she missed so many signs he was an insensitive pig?

"Your next appointment just called. She's got the flu."

Courtney looked up at Jasmine. "She want to reschedule?"

"Said she'd call back tomorrow."

Courtney sighed. Her 11:30 had been a generous tipper, and she'd been scheduled for full highlights. At least she'd canceled. Courtney hated it when people showed up hacking up a lung, spreading germs everywhere.

"I'm going to lunch," she announced abruptly. She snatched her purse from the cabinet where she'd stowed it and breezed past Jasmine. "I'll be back for my one-fifteen."

It was another scorching day, but Courtney welcomed the sun on her face as she left Bella Donna. She'd been cooped up indoors too much lately. She needed to get out. She waited for a few minutes at the corner and hopped a bus to the UT campus. Her favorite Internet cafe was on Guadalupe Street, and she had some research to do.

Two chai lattes later, she was bleary-eyed from looking at news clips and legal articles. God, the law was boring. She didn't know how people could stand it.

Of course, maybe the fees helped. The lawyers' cut of David's last big trial had been twenty million. Even after David had shared the fee with his firm and the other litigator who'd tried the case with him, he'd taken home over five million, according to the Central Texas Bar Bulletin.

Courtney's eyes were glazing over, so she closed out of the text page and clicked over to some video sites. After entering a few keywords, she opened up a thirty-second sound bite from the local ABC affiliate. David stood on the steps of the courthouse in his favorite navy suit as eager reporters shoved microphones in his face.

"The jury's message today was clear," he announced. "The American public won't stand for big business profiting from the deaths of innocent people. Justice has prevailed-"

Courtney clicked Pause. She leaned forward and squinted at the screen. Who were these people walking down the steps, behind David? She clicked back to the beginning of the sound bite.

"-innocent people. Justice has prevailed-"

Pause.

It was Eve Caldwell. And that professor whose picture Will had shown her. They were exiting the courthouse as David's trial wrapped up.

They were part of the trial.

Courtney's blood chilled as the idea sank in. This was about the case. This was about sixty million dollars. Will had been right. The pockets involved here were very, very deep.

Her fingers shook on the keyboard now as she searched for more snippets of video. She couldn't find anything, but she had to learn more. Were Eve and the professor witnesses in the trial? Were they plaintiffs?

Were they jurors?

Had David been sleeping with a juror in his case?

"Oh my God," Courtney whispered, staring at the screen. That could be it. Maybe he'd rigged the jury. Maybe he'd fixed the outcome.

Courtney shot up from her seat and grabbed her purse. She logged off the computer and stuffed her credit card back into her bag. She had to get out of here. She had to tell Will. She rushed out of the cafe and glanced down the street.

"Dammit!" She stomped her foot as the bus she wanted pulled away from the corner three blocks up.

But she could call him. She didn't have to go anywhere; she could just call him. She whipped out her phone and stepped back from the curb. She scrolled through her speed-dial list as a car rolled to a stop beside her.

A black Escalade.

The door pushed open.

CHAPTER 13.

Courtney stared, slack-jawed, at the man getting out of the car. Gray eyes. Bulky. He was looking at her.

He lunged, and she leapt back. A flash of metal appeared in his hand, and Courtney's heart flip-flopped.

"Gun!" she shrieked, ducking into the doorway.

She heard a commotion behind her as she yanked open the door and stumbled back inside the coffee shop. She scrambled past the row of computer terminals, bumping into chairs and tripping over backpacks on the floor. She glanced frantically over her shoulder, but the doorway was empty.

A streak of black shot past the window as the Escalade peeled away from the corner. They were on the move.

She caught a flash of motion as the cafe's side door flung open.

Him. Coming after her. Her gaze dropped to his hands. One was tucked inside his tracksuit, along with something pointy.

She spun on her heel and elbowed her way through people milling around the coffee bar.

"Help!" she screamed, and people looked at her like she was nuts. She glanced behind her, but the man was gone.

Where'd he go?

She raced past the cash register to the restroom corridor, where she knew there was a back exit. She pushed through the door, jumping with surprise when an alarm howled in her ear.

She stood there, panting. An alarm was good. Weren't you supposed to scream "fire" if you ever got attacked? She glanced up and down the alley and wished a cop or security guard would come running.

He appeared at the end of the alley. The door clicked shut behind her. She whirled around and tried it.

Locked!

Her gaze darted back. The man charged toward her.

She bolted the other direction, slipping and sliding over the slick pavement. She dashed past a Dumpster, inhaling the rank smell of garbage as her heart thundered.

"Help! Fire!"

Another glance over her shoulder. He reached inside his pocket.

She spotted a doorway up ahead, propped open with a milk crate. She raced for it, and his footsteps thudded behind her, gaining, gaining. She reached the door and tripped though the opening. On a burst of inspiration, she kicked the crate back into the alley, hoping this door locked automatically, too.

She was in a kitchen, between a vat of dirty dishes and a big stove. She smelled cooking oil.

The door jerked open, and a giant hand seized her arm. Shrieking, she kicked back at him. With her other hand, she grabbed hold of something on the stove. A wok. She flung it backward.

He bellowed and doubled over. She bolted away from him, plowing through people in aprons and hairnets. She ran past stainless steel sinks and counters, then burst through the first door she spotted and ended up in a dark, empty room. She stopped to let her eyes adjust. A dining room. And it wasn't empty-there were tables scattered around and people hunched over plates of food. Voices hushed. Chopsticks froze. Pairs of startled eyes gazed up at her. She stood there, gasping for breath.

A tall rectangle of light flashed as the kitchen door swung open.

"Fire!" she screamed, sprinting for the entrance. She jerked open the door and ran into the blinding sunshine. A sidewalk. A sandwich shop. An Urban Outfitters. She was on Guadalupe again.

She raced down the sidewalk, elbowing through the endless students and backpacks, even passing someone gliding along on in-line skates.

She hazarded a glance back, and a horn blared. She halted in the middle of an intersection. The car honked again, and she jumped out of the way. She looked around desperately for a cop or a phone.

She had a phone.

She plunged her hand into her bag and groped for it. Where was her phone? She could never find it when she needed it most. She darted her gaze around. Where was the Escalade? She needed to get out of here. She needed safety.

Brakes hissed as an orange-and-white bus pulled up to the corner two blocks away. A student shuttle. She dashed toward it. Her heart pounded. Her calves burned. The straps of her high-heeled sandals bit into her skin.

She heard the door close, saw the brake lights go black.

"Wait!"

The bus groaned forward, and she slapped the side. "Wait!"

It stopped.

The doors popped open.

She grabbed the handrail and heaved herself inside.

Will picked his way up the vine-covered hillside, trying to put the images out of his mind. The kudzu tangled around his ankles, and he felt like it was tangled around his neck, too, depriving him of even this hot, stagnant air.

"You okay?" Devereaux asked from behind him.

"Yeah."

They reached the top of the ravine where a slight breeze rustled leaves. Will stepped over to an oak tree and scraped the soles of his shoes on the trunk to get rid of the mud.

"It's the heat," his partner said. "All those weeks in the sun. You sure you're okay?"

"Yeah." Actually, he wanted to hurl, and he probably would if Devereaux didn't shut up soon.

"ME'll probably rush the autopsy. I'll need you to check missing kid reports. See what we can turn up."

Will swallowed the bile in his throat and tried to ignore the sweat streaming down his back. Devereaux scraped his shoes on the same tree, and then they trudged back to the Taurus, which was parked on the shoulder of this isolated stretch of road. The crime-scene van sat a few hundred feet north of them, closer to the slimy creek bed where the body had been found.

Will's phone vibrated, and he checked the screen. Courtney. Damn. He'd missed two calls from her, but he didn't want to tell Devereaux that. He walked away from the Taurus until he was sure he was out of earshot, then dialed her back.

"It's me. What's up?"

"Where have you been?" she demanded.

"I'm in the middle of something. What do you need?"

Silence.

"Courtney? What's wrong?"

"Nothing." But her voice sounded funny when she said it.

"Why did you call?"

"I had a problem. But I've got it handled."

She had it handled. How come he didn't believe that?

"What kind of problem?"

"Hodges! We gotta get moving." Devereaux waved him over.

"Are you working?" she asked.

"I'm at a crime scene. What kind of problem?"

"Forget it. It's fine now. When do you get off? I need to talk to you about something."