The Heart Of Texas

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The Heart Of Texas Page 21

by RJ Scott


  * * * *

  Jack said nothing at first, processing what Riley had said, hearing the worry and fear in his question, the complete shock, the pain, the questions and the anger. Knowing it would destroy his new husband totally to lose Jack to prison on top of everything that had happened, he knew Riley didn't speak out of belief, but out of a desperate hope to not lose Jack.

  "I didn't do it, Riley," he said, his voice completely devoid of pretense or guile. He said it calmly, his hands out flat in front of him and in peace.

  Riley just nodded. "I know, I know, but Jeff… he's at Mercy. They're going to see, going to know what you did. They'll have your blood, your DNA… it's all over him and—"

  Jack stepped forward, cutting off Riley's scared words with a finger to his lips. "I'll be honest, and I'll tell them what I did, and I'll tell them I didn't shoot Jeff. It's the truth."

  "But Beth… you can't tell them why you…" Riley's voice tailed off. Beth didn't want to press charges, didn't want it made public. Hysteria started to bubble inside him, out of control, and he couldn't concentrate on one thing out of everything in his head. He was losing it; losing hold of his sanity, inch by painful inch.

  "Okay," Jack started firmly, his hands on Riley's upper arms, giving him a small shake as he spoke. "We get Eden, we go to Mercy, we see what has happened, get the facts, see who's been assigned to this case. I'll come clean about what I did and get my wrist slapped. Simple." Jack lowered his hands, grasped Riley's tight, the cell hard between them. "Riley, listen to me. Stay here, okay? I'll get Eden."

  * * * *

  Riley felt himself nodding allowing Jack to help him, needing Jack to help him.

  When Eden stumbled down the stairs, Jack trying to support her, Riley held himself straight, watching as Donna and Josh hovered by the door, not knowing what to do. She ran the small distance to the fence, and Riley just opened his arms, pulling her in and holding her close.

  "He isn't dead, Eden," he kept repeating, not sure why he was saying that. He thought he caught her saying "When will this end?" He hugged her tighter, knowing exactly how she was feeling. When would it all end? This nightmare that he seemed to be caught in, the nightmare Eden was in along with Beth, Jack, and so many others, was hurting people again and again in the name of Hayes.

  "Do we have to go and see him?" She sounded so very young as she clung to him, and as if she was a feather, he picked her up and sat her atop the fence, lifting her chin to look into eyes so like his own, his mother's legacy he guessed. They were swimming with tears, and he sensed Jack handing over tissues, standing at his side, a calming presence.

  "Do you want to go and see him?" Riley asked softly.

  "Is he unconscious?"

  "They said he was being taken into surgery; that the bullet was near his heart—"

  "He doesn't have a heart," Eden interrupted quickly, a sudden mask of determination on her face. "I don't want to see him."

  Riley nodded. He hefted his cell phone and flipped the cover, redialing the last number received and waiting. Eden looked confused and Jack made to speak, but Riley hushed them with a raised hand until finally the call connected.

  "Riley Campbell-Hayes. No, we decided not to. Nope, we don't plan on it. I'll contact Jeff's dad. No, if you need that then we're at the Double D—the Campbell ranch off of— Okay." He closed the cell, leaning in and burying his face in his sister's hair, looking for something normal, a familiar smell, a familiar touch, just looking for peace. "The detective in charge, Tom Stafford, wants to speak to us all. He's bringing his partner, and we should expect him in about an hour." He spoke calmly, glancing over at Jack, who just nodded, closing his eyes and sighing.

  "I'm gonna go keep Beth company," Eden said softly. "You gonna be okay, Riley?" To an outsider, it might have looked odd, this tiny slip of a girl looking up at her brother, broad in the shoulder and a good foot taller than her, asking him if he was going to be okay, but to Riley, it meant everything. He smiled softly, using his thumb to wipe away the tears on her cheeks. She was his sister, and she was his to look after, but she had an incredible strength in her that was sometimes his only anchor to the real world.

  "I'll be fine." He linked hands with Jack. "We'll be in soon." Eden reached up on tiptoes, placing a small kiss on her brother's stubble-rough skin.

  "Love you, big brother."

  "Love you, little sister."

  Chapter 42

  It was a tense two hours interviewing Riley and Eden, and then finally moving on to Jack Campbell-Hayes, who sat quietly at the table and explained exactly what he'd done.

  Stafford made notes. Riley Campbell-Hayes, brother of the victim, no alibi, the last person known to have been with his brother; Jack Campbell-Hayes, the husband, who for some reason, Tom knew, wasn't being entirely honest about why he'd beaten up Jeff Hayes. Again, Jack, no alibi, was driving, no witnesses, both men had access to guns, both licensed to carry. And then there was Eden, clearly distraught, but constantly looking to her brother for strength.

  Interesting.

  He made notes on the family dynamics, knew enough about the Hayeses from news items as to who was missing from here. Gerald Hayes, father, missing. Sandra Hayes, mother, missing. Lisa Hayes, wife, missing.

  He also recalled Riley's phrasing during the phone call— Jeff's father, a slip that maybe a less observant man wouldn't have caught, but he had caught it. He turned to his partner, closing the notebook, his eyes carefully scanning the individuals standing in the kitchen.

  "I'll need you to come downtown tomorrow and make a formal statement," he said to Jack, who nodded and pressed his lips together in a tight, frowning face. Tom knew he needed this on record. If Jeff woke up after the operation then he would probably want to press charges. His badge was telling him now to take Jack, who had no alibi and blood already on his hands. But his gut feeling was telling him that there was more to this story. "It's simple enough to check through traffic cams. If you can detail your drive as closely as you can."

  Jack's heart sank. He had been mostly driving on instinct, not really with any destination in mind. "I'll try to remember," he said finally.

  Tom stood, turning to Riley. "I need to speak to your mother, your father, and your sister-in-law. Do you have any ideas where they would be at this moment?"

  "Try the eighteenth hole at the Oaks for Gerald. I have my mother's cell number. I've left a message, and you have the number now. Lisa…" He shrugged. "She left Jeff. Mom may know where she went."

  "If you should hear from any of them, I need to know," Tom finally said, before thanking Donna for the coffee, and indicating John should follow him out. It was only when he was outside that he breathed a sigh of relief, his head pounding from an intense headache right across his eyes.

  "You okay?" His partner looked concerned.

  "So many secrets," he said. "The Dallas aristocracy and their freaking secrets."

  Chapter 43

  The knock on Jim's door was unexpected and very loud in the stillness of his apartment, and it was with not a small amount of irritation that he opened the door, ready to sound off at the drop of a hat. If it wasn't one thing, it was another, if it wasn't his son's brother being in the hospital unconscious, it was Gerald freaking Hayes demanding his presence at everything from meetings to golf games.

  Gerald knew Jim was Riley's dad. Jim didn't need to say a word. There was too much water under that particular bridge to even go there. They would, in the same way as they'd done for over twenty-five years, ignore the elephant in the room every time they spoke. Jim had made promises, and he intended to keep them, but he wanted to know his son. More than the closeness he already shared with Riley, he wanted a family connection.

  "What?" he bit out as he opened the door, wincing as Eden Hayes launched herself at him, gripping at his shirt, her head buried against his chest, sobbing uncontrollably. Pushing the door closed, he eased her back from him, seeing grief so deeply etched in her face it scared him.

 
"Eden, what is it? Is it Riley?" She couldn't speak, couldn't get words past her need to gulp air, and she shook her head. He knew he wasn't going to get sense out of her, so he guided her to sit on the sofa, disentangled her hands and fetched her water before sitting on the coffee table in front of the sofa and waiting.

  Finally she seemed to calm and looked at Jim, her eyes steady. "I need you to help me. Can you help me?"

  Jim frowned. Of course he would help her. She may not be his daughter by blood, but she was every bit as much his as Riley was in every way that mattered. "Help you with what, babe?"

  "When Jeff…" She stopped, her teeth worrying her lower lip, her expressive eyes filling with tears again, but this time without the shaking he'd seen in her.

  "When Jeff what?"

  "I was there… in the house."

  "You were there? Did you see something? Eden?"

  * * * *

  The day of the shooting

  How was it Jeff had the capacity to hurt her so much? She was Eden Alyssa Hayes, heiress, socialite. She was confident and her own woman, but with a few well-chosen words, her oldest brother could make her feel like a spoiled brat. She tolerated him, just this side of hate. He'd always been the perfect pseudo-Gerald with his sly, intolerant, elitist mannerisms and his icy uncompromising grip on everyone's life, including hers.

  "What's up, Eden? Someone piss in your Jimmy Choos?" It wasn't much, but it was enough to push her to snap back with a simple and effective "Fuck you." She had been staring listlessly out of the window at the manicured lawns beyond, her mind turning over Beth being pregnant, her new friend positively glowing with the evidence of what had happened to her, and Steve was so completely in love with her, so attentive.

  It sent knives of envy through her, and she had found herself simply standing, wishing Jeff would just leave. He knew which buttons to press, which words to use that made her quick to temper, and it was best to leave. She pushed past him and out of the front door. Maybe a walk in the garden would stop her melancholy.

  She had spent a little while with the roses, breathing deeply of the scent of freshly cut grass, and then returned to her room. She would shower and return to the Double D and visit with Beth. She enjoyed it there. She heard the shouting coming from downstairs, and it grew louder. She couldn't make out much, but she heard thuds, grunts, and the sounds of fists on flesh. She crept to the landing, her hand over her mouth as she saw Jack beating Jeff, almost killing him, and Riley running in, trying to pull his husband away.

  "Jack stop! What the fuck," Riley shouted, holding him back, looking down at Jeff, gripping Jack tightly.

  "He raped Beth. Your brother raped my sister." Jack's voice was broken, and Eden nearly ran down the stairs. "Now he's threatening to take the baby from her. Tell me I can't kill him, Riley."

  "No," Riley said, and she heard Jack reply "Fuck you" before stalking from the hallway. Riley ran after him, leaving Jeff a bloody mess on the floor.

  She wondered what she should do. Should she call 911? She was a witness to what Jack had done… but Jeff had raped Beth? And he was threatening to claim the baby? Eden heard a whimper, and saw Lisa stumbling back to the rooms closest to her, her momma's rooms. Eden thought to follow but then Jeff moved, pushing himself to his feet, and she ran back to her own rooms, hiding in the bathroom, her cell in her hand.

  She crept to the door, hearing Jeff dismissing staff, coming to her room, calling her name and then the noise of him going down the corridor to his own rooms, cursing every step of the way.

  Then she heard the shot. She knew as certainly as she knew her own name that Lisa had shot Jeff. She entered the bedroom and found Lisa standing over the body of her husband, the gun loose in her hands.

  "Give it to me, Lisa." They needed to get out of there.

  "Eden?" Lisa looked to be in shock. She was pale, her eyes empty.

  "We need to go."

  * * * *

  The Present

  Jim leaned forward. "The gun, Eden. Where is the gun?"

  She seemed to shakily snap back to the here and now. She reached into her purse, pulling out the weapon and dropping it to the floor as though horrified by the feel of it.

  "Hell. You were carrying it with you?" Jim couldn't believe what he could see in front of him, couldn't even begin to comprehend what Lisa had done, what she'd been through, but Eden looked at him, hazel eyes pleading.

  "Help me, Uncle J. Please tell me what to do."

  Helplessly he bundled her into his arms and moved to sit behind her on the sofa, pulling her back. The midnight hour cloaked them in darkness, and he simply held her as she wept and finally fell asleep in his arms.

  There had to be a way.

  He pulled out his cell, thumbing contacts.

  "Bailey?"

  "Gerald, we need to talk."

  Chapter 44

  It was the tenth day since the shooting and the tenth time that Riley was the first one up. Jack was still asleep and curled on his side, though Riley knew he would wake soon and come to find him out with the horses. To be fair, Riley hadn't actually fallen asleep at all; he had too much spinning through his head. He was exchanging his vows with Jack today, with his family and friends around him, a much better man than he'd been mere months before. He felt no nerves, only an incredible sense of peace that started in his belly and ended up curled around his heart. He was promising his life and his heart to Jack, and it felt so right he could almost weep with the emotion. He sensed Jack arriving behind him before his husband even said a word.

  "Hey," Jack said as he slid into the circle of Riley's arms, offering him coffee and smiling almost shyly.

  "Hey," Riley replied softly, capturing Jack's mouth in a soft kiss then pulling back to look into blue eyes, soft and warm with sleep.

  "It's a big day," Jack observed carefully, wondering why his husband was standing so alone out here as the Texas dawn painted the sky with muted hues.

  "A day we'll remember for the rest of our lives," Riley said. "I couldn't sleep earlier and I wondered if what we're doing is right, With Beth pregnant and Jeff in the hospital and Lisa missing, should we be—"

  "If you ask should we be looking into renewing our vows then I may have to beat you into submission." Jack smiled at his own joke, pleased when Riley smirked back, shadows lifting from his eyes.

  "Like to see you try," he offered, and laughing, they leaned into each other and looked out over the land that was the D, lost in thought and contemplating the day ahead. It was Riley who saw the lights heading inexorably towards the ranch house. A car. Both men moved to greet whoever it was, Jack frowning as Detectives Stafford and Patterson climbed out of the car, weapons drawn, looks of determination on their faces.

  Riley half smiled, saw the gun, saw the purposeful look in Stafford's eyes, then the next was a blur. Strong arms pulled Jack away, pushing him against the car. Stafford's partner cuffed Jack, words spinning in the morning air. "Jackson Robert Campbell— Right to remain silent— Right to an attorney— Do you understand these rights?" What was happening here? Why were they doing this? The single moment was crystallized in front of him, Jack resigned, quiet, Stafford's partner dragging Jack away, Stafford standing between him and Jack and stopping Riley from stepping forward.

  "No, wait!" Was that his own voice? Riley couldn't tell Jack was watching as he was forced into the back of the car. "No!" Jack finally shouted, pushing forward, but Stafford stood firm, gripping Riley's arms, his face calm and understanding.

  "I'm sorry, Mr Campbell-Hayes… Riley. Please work with me here. I can't stop this. Your brother is awake."

  Riley stood rooted to the spot, shock and disbelief cutting into him like knives, then in a sudden lunge, he made to wrestle Jack away from the other cop. He slipped past Stafford in a practiced move, his hands almost reaching Jack before he was body checked, Tom pushing him hard against the front of the car, shouting at him.

  "You are not helping Jack here, Riley. Leave it, follow us to the station."


  Riley struggled, desperation giving him the edge, heaving and twisting until he turned the situation and Tom was now the one pinned to the car. It was Jack's voice, loud and clear from the car, that stopped him. "Riley, no! Call Josh. Call Jim. It will be okay."

  The fight left Riley as quickly as it had started, and he released his hold on the detective, his thoughts scarily blank. "He didn't do anything," he said simply as he looked into Tom's face. He saw a flare of understanding there before it was pushed behind the mask of a man doing his job.

  "Riley," he began, "your brother gave us a name. He identified Jack as the shooter."

  Chapter 45

  It was a new dawn when Gerald arrived at Jim's apartment. The dark of the hallway and the silence of the block was unnerving. To get a call from Jim in the middle of the night, he guessed it must be something to do with the whole Jeff situation, and he wondered if Jim was going to admit to having shot Jeff himself, although for the life of him, he couldn't fathom any reason why he would have done anything like that. He knocked on the door, only having to wait mere seconds before Jim ushered him in and closed the door behind them.

  "What is so God-fired important you got me here at 5 am?" Gerald blustered, decided the best defense was an offense, turning suddenly in shock at a small voice behind him.

  "Daddy?"

  Gerald couldn't believe his eyes. His Eden here, in Jim's apartment, sleep mussed and red-eyed. His mind went suddenly blank. Was Jim making a statement somehow by sleeping with his daughter?

 

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