Third Degree - LightNovelsOnl.com
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A Kafkaesque dread descended in her soul. "Warren...the kids. Please keep your voice down." She took a deep breath, then spoke with utter sincerity. "If you don't believe what you heard with your own ears, I don't know what I can do. The only place I've ever cheated on you is inside your head."
"Are these in my head?" he cried, s.n.a.t.c.hing up a bundle of bearer bonds.
"I can't explain those," she said with conviction. "But I'm not involved with Kyle Auster in any way. I'll take a lie detector test, if you want."
Warren was staring at the bonds, not at her.
"Think," she said. "Use that big brain of yours. Who could have told you where to find this stuff except the person who put it there?"
"Maybe that's how it is," he said slowly. "Maybe when Kyle dumped you, you kept his money for revenge. Maybe he's trying to get back at you like this."
"That's crazy!" she cried, causing the lock to jerk taut against her throat. "Think of the risks. And he'd never get his money back."
"Maybe it's his wife, then. E-mailing me, I mean. She'd d.a.m.n sure have a reason to get back at him."
"You think Kyle would tell his wife about hidden money? Come on."
"I don't know. But I guess you do."
"I'm just guessing, for G.o.d's sake. Just like you. All I care about are those two children upstairs. They're going to know something's wrong pretty soon, if they don't already."
Warren gave her the same odd smile as before. "You don't have enough faith in them. They're fine. Whatever I tell them, they'll believe. They trust me, Laurel. They know who protects them."
They know who takes care of them, she thought. "You're right about one thing today. There's something bad going on around you. But you're wrong about me being part of it. Look how Kyle reacted just then. I offered the man a b.l.o.w. .j.o.b, and he said no. Does that sound like Kyle Auster to you?"
Warren picked up the red ledger. He seemed to be trying to stare a hole through it.
Laurel said, "You need to forget about who's s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g who and ask Kyle about this financial stuff. Before something really bad happens."
She heard a b.u.mp upstairs. Then another. The kids were still up there.
"Maybe I will," Warren said, staring at the other phone. "Maybe I will."
Auster was swigging from the Diaka bottle again when his office door opened and Vida swept in the way his mother used to when he'd misbehaved as a boy. She shut the door behind her, then stood before his desk with a look so harsh that all his glib opening lines fled his brain.
"Are you drunk?" she asked.
"Vida...we're in trouble. Bad trouble."
Her expression didn't change. "You just figured that out, Sherlock?"
Auster studied the bleach-blond harpy standing with her arms crossed over her chest and wondered why he'd ever gotten involved with her. He could hardly bear to look at her anymore, much less give her what she wanted after hours. Worse, he sensed that she didn't even want the s.e.x herself; it was simply a tool in her campaign to protect herself from a world that had always been less than kind to her.
"What's happened now?" she asked.
"I got a phone call while you were gone."
"From who? Biegler again?"
"No. Evans, up at the capital."
"And?"
Auster blew out a lungful of air. "He said Paul Biegler's driving down from Jackson to padlock the office. Now. As we speak."
This shook Vida from her pose. Shock pinned her painted eyelids back for several seconds, but then her features went hard again. "Let me guess. When you had Biegler on the phone, you got up on your hind legs and roared like a drunk frat boy. You can't keep that ego reined in, can you? I bet he's ready to put you under the jail."
Auster nodded in despair. "And I don't see what we can do besides sic him on Warren and hope he's content with that."
Vida gaped as though Auster had suggested driving into a brick wall at sixty miles per hour. "Listen to me, Doctor. You're as crooked as a barrel of fishhooks, but when it comes to actually committing a crime, you're about as smart as a barrel of hair. The mystery is how you made it through medical school. They must have had a lot of lady professors up there, that's all I can figure-"
"Vida-"
"d.a.m.n it, Kyle. Blaming s.h.i.+elds depended on a low-key investigation and things falling just right. On sanitizing this office of anything and everything that could contradict our version of things. Losing a lot of records. And most of all, on our special patients keeping their G.o.dd.a.m.n mouths shut. But we're not near ready yet." She dug a cigarette out of her back pocket, lit it, and began puffing furiously.
"I wish you wouldn't do that."
"Shut the f.u.c.k up, Kyle. I'm thinking. The only way we could dump this thing in s.h.i.+elds's lap now is if he shot himself in the head with the evidence in his house. Then we'd be the only ones left to tell what happened, other than the patients. They'd be expensive, but-"
"What about the records?"
"Shut up! I'm trying to keep your a.s.s out of jail."
He reached into his bottom drawer for the vodka.
Vida watched him take a slug with obvious contempt. Then she blew out a long stream of smoke and said, "I know what you're up to, mister. You've got some high-toned s.l.u.t on the side, stashed and waiting for you to bug out with her. I don't know who she is, but I will in about twenty seconds, because you're going to tell me."
Auster reached for the bottle again, but Vida lashed out with her hand and knocked it off his desk. The precious fluid gurgled onto the carpet.
"Don't sit there gasping like a landed fish. Tell me who she is."
"Vida, I wouldn't cheat on you."
"Jesus wept. Whoever she is, the s.l.u.t is out of your life as of this moment. In exchange, I'm going to save you the indignity of nightly a.n.a.l s.e.x in Parchman Farm, where you most definitely would not be the top."
"Shannon Jensen," Auster whispered with the sound of a deflating balloon.
Vida's eyes flashed with fury and disbelief. "The drug rep from Jackson?"
He nodded.
"She's only twenty-three!"
Before Auster could reply, Vida said, "Of course she's only twenty-three. Young enough to buy into your bulls.h.i.+t and throw her life away before it's begun. G.o.d, you're a p.r.i.c.k. That smug little sorority princess prancing up these halls with a corncob up her b.u.t.t...Jesus."
Vida was turning pale; primal anger was threatening to take over her higher brain functions. Before she could wind up again, Auster said, "I'm sorry, I'm an idiot. She's history. Just tell me what to do."
Vida flattened both hands on his desk and leaned over the charts lying there. "I've got half a mind to let Biegler clean your clock for you. I could turn state's evidence, send you to Parchman for twenty years, and walk away rich. They give rewards for that kind of evidence now. Monetary rewards. I'd be getting a ma.s.sage in Cabo, while you'd be doing research on whether size really does matter or not."
Auster felt dizzy. "Vida, don't lose sight of what's-"
"I could do that," she went on, as though he hadn't spoken. "But I'm not. I don't want Nell getting in any kind of trouble."
"How can you prevent that?"
"By getting us all out clean." Her eyes drilled into him like twin X-ray beams. "I just need to know two things, bub."
"What?"
"One, that you're done with that sorority s.l.u.t."
Auster nodded eagerly. "And?"
"Make the call, Kyle."
"What call? To Shannon?"
"Who else?"
"But Biegler's on the way!"
"I can't think of a better time. Make it short and not so sweet."
Auster took out his cell phone and speed-dialed Shannon Jensen. She answered with a husky tone, "Mmm, I wasn't expecting this. I'm on the road between Oxford and Tupelo, and it's lonely."
Auster banished phone s.e.x from his mind. "Shannon, I need to tell you something."
"What?" Her alert business voice had come online.
"I have some bad news, honey. It's...it's not going to work out like we thought. It's just too complicated here. My marriage, I mean. I have to end it. You and me, I mean." Shannon gasped, but he pushed on before she could gather herself. "You deserve a lot better than me, you know that. I know you'll bounce back like nothing ever happened." The girl was screaming now, and sobbing, but the only word he could make out was "Why?" He started to embellish his excuse, but Vida leaned closer and gave him his cue line.
"You're in love with someone else," she whispered.
Auster closed his eyes.
"Say it," Vida commanded.
"I'm in love with someone else, Shannon."
"Oh my G.o.d," Shannon cried. "Someone besides your wife?"
"That's right."
"I don't believe you!"
"Tell her who," Vida ordered.
"It's Vida," he said in desolation. "From up front. She's always been the one."
"Even when we were together," Vida whispered.
Auster grimaced, but he had no alternative. "Even when we were together, I was with her."
The line was dead. He prayed Shannon had hung up before she heard the last of it.
"There," Vida said with supreme satisfaction. "Doesn't that feel better?"
He forced himself to nod. "I was telling the truth. You have always been the one. I just...you know me. She made it so easy, and-"
"You're embarra.s.sing yourself." Vida leaned back and put her hands on her hips like a drill sergeant. "Are you ready to do what you have to do to save us?"
He nodded.
"Can you grow a freaking backbone for five minutes?"
"Absolutely."
"Okay. I want you to drive over to Dr. s.h.i.+elds's house and get the stuff you planted there."
This stunned him. "What do you mean, get it?"
"Retrieve it. Take it out of the safe room and drive it to where I tell you."
"But why?"
"We need it to disappear. Forget blaming Warren. We need everything in that house to disappear. The second set of books, the coded records, everything. Most of all, the bonds. Biegler may have frozen your business accounts by now. Maybe even the personals."
"Jesus!"
"Do you understand?"
"Yes, but what if Warren's at home? He didn't come in today, which is pretty strange, and...oh, G.o.d."
"What?" Vida asked, her eyes narrowed.
"What if Warren is working with Biegler?"
Vida thought about this for a few seconds, then dismissed the idea with a shake of her head. "No. He'd never admit to the things he's done, not even for a big reward. His reputation means everything to him."
"He might do it to stay out of jail."
"I don't think he's at risk of going to jail. Not really. Even if they threw the book at him, he could plead out. We're the ones who could go to jail. But I'll tell you, there's something weird going on with our Warren. For five years, he's a Boy Scout. Then he walks in and says he needs money. Big money. And he starts breaking rules left and right. It doesn't add up. There's something fishy about that life insurance he got last year, too. I don't know what, but I know Warren's not about to start cooperating with the Feds. He hates the government. And in his eyes, he's got more to lose than any of us."
"Okay," Auster said, calming a little. "But if he's at home, I can't just waltz into his safe room and start carting stuff out. He'll freak out."
"Screw him, okay? This is life or death, Kyle. If you have to, go in with your key, grab the stuff, and get out. You know the code. Whatever he says or does, humor him, but get that s.h.i.+t out of there. Tell him the FBI planted it there. Or just ignore him. s.h.i.+elds won't hit you or anything. He's not the type. Not unless you were f.u.c.king his wife or something." Vida froze, her eyes boring into Auster's. "You're not, are you?"
"h.e.l.l, no!"