Kaitlan’s eyes darted from him to Margaret, bottom lip drawn between her teeth.
Margaret pulled her head back and looked him square in the eye. “D., we can talk about this later. Right now you want to help Kaitlan, don’t you? Then listen to me—search somewhere else. I’m not your leak.”
She held his gaze until the ice flow of his anger broke up and drifted out to sea.
His thoughts floated back to Craig Barlow.
“Then he’s hacked into my computer somehow. Or my online data storage. Craig has read my manuscript.”
Silence throbbed. The three of them focused on the floor, across the room, as the reality settled in their minds.
Darell forced himself to regroup.
He turned to Kaitlan. “I’ve been out of touch with local news in the past year.” All news, for that fact. Except for Googling his own name in masochistic curiosity to see what they were saying about his demise. “I’ve heard nothing about these murders. Are the women sexually assaulted?”
“No. The police have said that much.”
Darell calculated the information.
Kaitlan thrust both hands into her hair. “Look, I can’t imagine how Craig knows what you’re writing. Even with so much pointing to him, I just can’t believe he killed those women. He’s a good person and I … I love him.” She aimed a pleading look at Darell. “Tell me how he can be innocent. I must be missing something.”
His heart squeezed. “What about your landlords? Wouldn’t they also have a key to your place?”
“Yeah, the Jensons have one. But they left for Europe a week ago.”
“Anyone else they might have given a key to? Family in the area?”
“Their kids are grown and live across the country. I don’t know who in this area they would allow to have a key to a rented apartment.”
Margaret spread her hands. “If Craig killed these women, why would he tell Kaitlan about the cloth when he’s not supposed to know?”
“Don’t you know anything after reading my novels, woman?” Darell shot her a withering look. “Three reasons why criminals get caught: greed, ego, or drugs. Ego—that’s a big one. The criminal thinks he’s smarter than everyone else. That he’ll never get caught. And then he gets so full of himself he just has to talk about it.”
Kaitlan closed her eyes, a sick expression on her face. “But how could Craig read your manuscript? And why would he use your writing in real life anyway?”
Darell pulled his head back. “Because
Kaitlan drew her top lip between her teeth and shot Margaret a nonplussed look.
They were silent for a moment. Darell’s brain shuffled through the evidence. Everything pointed to Craig Barlow. Darell wished he could tell his granddaughter it wasn’t so. But the truth was the truth.
If this were a novel, what would he write next?
He’d be stuck, that’s what.
He needed a better sense of this killer.
“What about Craig’s mother? You haven’t mentioned her.”
“She ran off with some other man when Craig was eight. Abandoned her kids. Craig’s father ended up raising him and his sister, Hallie.”
“Yes, he’s bitter. I don’t think the pain has ever gone away.”
“How old is he?”
“Twenty-five.”
“How long has he been a cop?”
“Three years.”
Darell’s thoughts were flowing freely now. “How long have you been dating him?”
“Three months.”
Darell tapped his cane. “And the last known victim was two months ago.”
“Yes.”
“Where was Craig at the time of that murder?”
She focused on the far wall. “I don’t know. I think that one and the one before it happened at night. ”
At night. So this one was an anomaly. Perhaps because he now could lure the victim to Kaitlan’s rural apartment?
“What about this afternoon? Was Craig on duty?”
“Yes, patrolling. Alone in his car. Which, really, could give him time to …” Kaitlan crossed her arms and gazed at the floor.
Darell’s brain picked up speed. How terrible yet fascinating this was. Exhilarating. He felt the creative juices begin to flow. It felt
Could these real-life murders spur his faltering story?
Darell recoiled at the selfish thought. Three women dead and his granddaughter in dire trouble—and he was thinking about his need for a plot?
Still …
If he could just learn more about this real killer. Get into Craig’s mind—if, indeed, he was responsible, which seemed highly likely. Manipulate him.
Darell’s mind hummed. What serendipity. Just think of the novel he’d get out of this. Based on real events. Imagine the publicity! He’d reclaim his reputation, climb even higher —