Desperate Girls

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Desperate Girls Page 7

by Laura Griffin

“It’s in my contract.”

  “Seriously?” She leaned back. “You need a new lawyer. And Liam sounds like a control freak.”

  “Doesn’t bother me. I gave all that up when I joined the Secret Service.”

  “Why?”

  He smiled at her look of disbelief. “You really want to know?”

  “Yes, I do.”

  “It messes with my focus,” he said. “Coffee, sugar, junk food. Anything that gives you a short-term buzz eventually wears off and causes cravings. You’re better off without it.”

  “Speak for yourself.”

  Shouts erupted from the bar as the Rangers scored a run, and Brynn turned to look at the TV.

  “No, it’s true,” he said. “Imagine you’re protecting someone. You need to be completely in the moment. Every moment. You can’t be distracted because you’re jonesing for a cigarette or a hit of something. You have to be focused on the principal and the surrounding environment, ready to tune into any threat, at any time.”

  She stared at him. There was something smoky and sultry about her eyes tonight. And then there was that shirt. He was trying hard not to stare, but it was nearly impossible. Had she worn that for him?

  No. She’d planned to go out with Ross tonight. So was there something going on between them? The guy didn’t seem like Brynn’s type, but Erik had only known her for two days. Anyway, if there was something going on, he’d find out. That was how these things went. Everything came out eventually—affairs, rivalries, grudges. Erik was trained to observe people and pick up on precisely the things they wanted to hide.

  Such as the guy at the far end of the bar in the leather biker jacket. He had a gun tucked in the back of his pants, and Erik was keeping an eye on him.

  “So . . . ‘be in the moment.’ ” She gave him a long look. “Interesting philosophy.”

  “It’s more of an operating principle.”

  “What else?”

  “What else what?”

  She smiled. “I want to hear more about your operating principles.”

  Did she really? He watched her expression, but he couldn’t tell.

  “Wolfe Sec is the best in the field,” he said. “Liam’s put together a workforce of highly trained, intensely focused operators who will go to any lengths to protect a principal.”

  “Any lengths . . . like jumping in front of a bullet?”

  He nodded.

  “Really? I mean, come on. I can see why someone might do that for a president. But a rock star? Or a lawyer?”

  Erik sighed. Here was the trust issue again. “Ideally, nobody’s jumping in front of bullets,” he said. “The best security is preventive. First and foremost, that requires having trust with the client. Meaning you.”

  “Hmm. That’s a tough one, because I hardly know you.”

  “You don’t have to know me. You have to know that your safety is my top priority. You have to know that I’m thinking about your case around the clock.”

  “Even when you’re off duty?” She sounded skeptical.

  “That’s the point. I’m never really off. None of us is. While we’re working for you, you have our full attention.”

  The waiter dropped off their drinks. When he was gone, Brynn clinked her glass against Erik’s.

  “Thanks for coming out with me.” She sipped the foam off her beer.

  “No problem.”

  He hadn’t been thrilled with the idea, but now he was glad to be here. There were things they needed to talk about, and she seemed more relaxed away from all her case files and legal pads.

  “Are you ready for tomorrow?” he asked.

  “Yeah, but I don’t want to talk about it. That’s bad luck.”

  He smiled slightly.

  “What?”

  “You’re superstitious,” he said.

  “Isn’t everybody, at least a little?”

  “No.”

  “Well, if I sit around hashing through the case the night before, I get all wound up and have trouble sleeping. It’s better if I take the night off so I don’t overthink it. Maybe it’s weird, but it’s my thing. And I’ve got the best win record at the firm, so I’ll stick with what works.”

  Erik was impressed, but he kept it to himself. She had plenty of confidence already.

  “So what happens tomorrow?” he asked.

  “Voir dire. That’s lawyer-speak for jury selection,” she added. “We go through every potential juror, one by one, and each side has a limited number of opportunities to strike someone from the pool.”

  He watched her talk, paying attention to her body language—something else he’d been trained to pick up on. She made lots of eye contact, which probably helped her win people over in the courtroom.

  “What makes you strike someone?” he asked. “Race or age, I’m guessing?”

  “Actually, no. I mean, race is a factor, sure. Sebring is mixed race, so we definitely don’t want an all-white jury. But more important, I’m looking for mothers.”

  “Mothers,” he repeated.

  “Preferably mothers of sons. They tend to be sympathetic.”

  Erik lifted an eyebrow.

  “What, you don’t believe me?”

  “I didn’t say that.”

  “I can see it in your face.” She tipped her head to the side. “You have any brothers?”

  “Two. And my mom was tough as nails when we were growing up.”

  “Well, I bet she gets picked for jury duty a lot. She ever mention it?”

  “Actually . . . yeah, come to think of it.” Erik folded his arms over his chest. “I always thought it was because she was a teacher.”

  “Teachers are good, too. They tend to be fair-minded. What does your mom teach?”

  “She’s retired. But she taught middle-school science.”

  “I’d definitely want her on my jury, then. She’d pay close attention to the physical evidence.” She picked up her beer. “But hey, we’re not talking about the trial tonight, remember? It’s bad luck.”

  The waiter returned with two big plates. The hamburgers were about six inches tall, but Brynn didn’t hesitate to pick hers up and dig right in.

  “Mmm.” She closed her eyes and moaned.

  Erik tried to keep his mind out of the gutter as he started on his food. For a while, they ate without talking, and he kept his gaze moving between the bar’s two exits.

  “So Brynn, I need to ask you some things.”

  She looked wary. “You want to know about Corby.”

  “That’s right.”

  “You have a file on him, don’t you?”

  “Yeah, but I want to know from you.”

  She sighed. “Know what?”

  “I want to know why, exactly, you don’t think he killed Jen Ballard.”

  She looked at him for a long moment, then took a sip of beer. She placed her glass on the table.

  “The police think he did,” she said.

  “What do you think?”

  “I don’t know. The timing’s pretty uncanny, if it wasn’t him.”

  “True.”

  “But something feels off with it.”

  “Off how?”

  “Well . . . if you read about Corby, you know his MO. Every one of his victims was raped and choked, and then he slit their throats. So this thing with hunting down Jen and shooting her? It doesn’t add up.” Brynn shook her head. “I mean, if this is about revenge, wouldn’t a knife be his weapon of choice?”

  “I don’t know.”

  Erik knew someone who would, though. Liam’s brother was a criminal profiler, and they needed to get him involved in this.

  “Corby killed that prison guard with a homemade shank,” Erik said.

  “Yeah, that’s my point. He has a thing for knives. And torture. So he spends three years in prison fantasizing about getting revenge on the woman who helped put him there, and then he tracks her down and shoots her? And also, where’d he get the gun?” She tipped her head to the side. “You know a lot more a
bout guns than I do, in your line of work. Wouldn’t it be a stretch for a convicted felon to get a firearm so fast?”

  “With money, anything’s possible. He could have a connection in prison who told him where to go.”

  “That’s the other thing,” she said. “He’d just escaped. If every cop in the state is looking for him, you’d think he’d want to keep a low profile.”

  “You’re assuming he’s logical.”

  “Fair point. He might not do the logical thing. But he is smart. I know that firsthand from the trial.” She poked at her french fries, but she seemed to have lost her appetite.

  “Sorry to have to ask you about this,” he said.

  “It’s all right.”

  Still, he felt like shit for bringing it up. “Were you and Jen close?”

  She didn’t talk for a moment, just stared at her plate. Then she looked up.

  “Jen mentored me when I was just out of law school and working for the DA’s office. We got to be friends. She took it hard when I went over to the dark side.”

  “The dark side?”

  “Criminal defense work.”

  “Why’d you switch?”

  “Reggie made me a good offer.”

  “You said he’s hard to say no to.” Erik watched her reaction, trying to get a read on their relationship.

  “Also, I like the people—Reggie, Faith, Nicole. Plus Ross and the other lawyers. The firm is like the big, noisy family I never had. And there’s the money, obviously. I’ve got a ton of loans to pay back.” She shrugged, like changing sides was an easy decision, but Erik would bet it was more complicated.

  Erik had gone to the “dark side,” too, when he left public service for the private sector. Most people assumed he’d done it for money, and he didn’t waste his time trying to convince them otherwise.

  Brynn pushed her plate away. “You know, Corby was my last case working for the prosecution.”

  Erik hadn’t known that.

  “You know his nickname in prison?” she asked.

  “What?”

  “The Champ. You know why?”

  Erik tried to imagine. Despite his history of violence, Corby wasn’t a big man, only about five-five, one thirty. Erik couldn’t picture him being a champ of anything that involved physical strength.

  “Chess,” she said. “He was the reigning champion. No one could touch him, or so I’ve heard.”

  “Maybe they were scared to try.”

  “Or maybe he’s just smart.”

  “Did he ever reach out to you?”

  The question caught her off guard, and Erik saw her try to cover it.

  “Seemed like you had something on your mind when Liam asked you.”

  She took a deep breath. “It’s probably nothing.”

  “It’s not nothing, or you wouldn’t have thought of it.”

  She watched him, as if weighing what to say. This woman had trust issues, and he was going to have to find a way past them.

  “I got a note once,” she said.

  “Where?”

  “On my car.”

  “On your car?”

  “Tucked under the wiper blade. Blade. I just realized that.” She shook her head and looked away. “Not that that means anything, but—”

  “What did it say?”

  “No envelope, no return address, just a folded note. It said, ‘I’m watching you.’ And at the time, my mind went straight to Corby, because it was the one-year anniversary of his conviction.”

  “Shit, Brynn. What did you do with it?”

  “What do you think? I took it to the police.”

  “And?”

  “There were no prints on it besides mine. Not Corby’s or anyone’s. Which isn’t really surprising, right? Corby couldn’t exactly put a note on my car if he was sitting in prison in Beaumont.”

  “And yet you originally thought it might be from him. Why?”

  “I don’t know. Just the way he was at trial.” She leaned back in her chair. “He used to look at me, you know? Stare. The ‘I’m watching you’ thing made me think of him.”

  “So the police have the note.”

  She shook her head. “They returned it to me. It’s in a file at my office.”

  “I want to see it.”

  “Why? It doesn’t prove anything. The detective I gave it to thought I was totally paranoid.”

  “Because you believed it was important, or you wouldn’t have saved it.” He leaned closer. “Don’t discount your instincts. You helped prosecute this guy. You know him. You got a note, and you immediately thought of him. You shouldn’t ignore that.”

  She watched him. He hated the fear in her eyes. But he liked that his words had an effect on her. She wasn’t arguing with him, for a change.

  “I’ll ask someone to send it up,” she said.

  “Do it soon. I’ll get the marshals to look at it, too.”

  She looked down at their half-eaten burgers.

  “New topic,” she announced. “What do you think of Otto’s?”

  “It’s pretty good.”

  “That’s it? I take you to the best-kept secret in Dallas, and you give it a ‘pretty good’?”

  “It’s not what I pictured for you.”

  “Oh, yeah?” Her eyes sparked with interest. “What did you picture?”

  “Something . . . I don’t know, sophisticated. A wine bar or something. Maybe some lawyers hanging around the bar, talking shop.”

  “So you think I’m a snob.”

  “I didn’t say that.”

  “Sure, you did.”

  Brynn watched Erik polish off his burger as the bar filled up with regulars. She signed the check and left a big tip as Erik texted Hayes that they were ready to leave.

  Erik led her through the crowd to the door, and the Tahoe was parked right out front, engine running. Hayes jumped out and opened the passenger door for Brynn, while Erik went around.

  “You, step back!” Hayes yelled.

  “But—oof !”

  Brynn whirled around as something slammed against the car. Her heart lurched.

  “Stop!” Brynn jumped out and grabbed Hayes’s arm. “That’s our waiter!”

  Hayes had him pinned against the SUV, his face pressed against the window. At Erik’s sharp command, Hayes released the guy and stepped away.

  The flush-faced waiter shot a panicked look at Brynn and then Erik.

  “Are you all right?” Brynn reached out, but he jerked away.

  “Yeah. Jesus.” He looked at Erik as he smoothed his shirt. “You forgot your to-go.”

  “Thanks.” Erik snagged the bag off the ground.

  “I’m so sorry,” Brynn said. “Thank you.”

  The man hurried away, darting a scowl over his shoulder as he reached for the door.

  “What the hell was that?” Brynn demanded.

  “Get in,” Erik said, helping her.

  Batting his hands away, Brynn climbed into the back seat. Erik closed the door, cutting off further conversation.

  Hayes slid behind the wheel. As soon as Erik closed his door, they were moving. Erik stashed the to-go bag on the floor and calmly fastened his seat belt.

  “Um, hello? Someone want to explain what just happened?”

  Hayes glanced at her in the rearview mirror. “He rushed up to you.”

  “Yes, and thank God you were there.” She looked at Erik. “You think you guys might want to take it down a notch?”

  “He was doing his job. He intercepted the threat.”

  “Threat?” Brynn leaned forward between the seats. “That kid’s barely out of braces. He could press charges for aggravated assault.”

  “I hardly touched him,” Hayes said.

  “You shoved him against a vehicle.”

  “ ‘Aggravated’?” Erik gave her a skeptical look.

  “Hayes is armed.”

  “His weapon wasn’t out. The guy didn’t even see it.”

  “His body could be considered a deadly wea
pon,” she said. “So could yours.”

  Erik set the thermostat to seventy degrees. “Well, if he presses charges, you can represent us.”

  “Ha! You couldn’t afford me.” Brynn leaned back and folded her arms over her chest, not just pissed but rattled. She’d nearly jumped out of her skin when she heard Hayes’s booming voice behind her.

  The ride back was silent and uncomfortable. Hayes seemed embarrassed. Erik seemed tense. Brynn stared through the tinted back windows at the downtown streets, trying to get her head around this new reality. She’d thought going to Otto’s would settle her nerves and help her feel normal on the eve of a big trial. But nothing was normal when she was surrounded by armed men twenty-four/seven.

  Brynn closed her eyes and pinched the bridge of her nose, feeling a headache coming on. She thought of Jen and wished she and Erik hadn’t talked about her. Ross was right. She shouldn’t have talked to that homicide detective, because now she had all the lurid details of Jen’s murder filling her mind.

  She took out her phone and sent a message to Faith. Reggie’s assistant had known Jen from the law firm’s early days up in Dallas, and she was shocked by the murder. Everyone in the legal community was, from both sides of the aisle.

  Brynn told Faith about the anonymous note and asked her to overnight it to Dallas. Faith was the only other person at the firm who understood Brynn’s haphazard, somewhat alphabetical filing system. The note she’d received on the one-year anniversary of Corby’s conviction was in its own manila envelope within a file marked “D Com” for defendant communications.

  You believed it was important, or you wouldn’t have saved it. Brynn looked at Erik in the front seat, and she knew he was right.

  Hayes pulled up to the front door of the building to drop them off before heading to the parking garage. The whole door-to-door service thing made Brynn feel spoiled. But Erik kept insisting, and she needed to pick her battles with him.

  She swiped her way into the building with her key card and strode past the gurgling marble fountain in the lobby. Growing up, Brynn had lived in a series of apartments, none of which had a posh lobby or a rooftop pool or a fitness room. Brynn wasn’t footing the bill for this place, but still it seemed wasteful.

  She and Erik rode the elevator up without a word and went straight to Ross’s to deliver the to-go bag.

  As Erik let himself into the apartment, Brynn got a text from Bulldog: Meet me in the lobby.

 

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