Sense of Evil - Kay Hooper [94]
“All of a sudden everybody has a degree in psychology,” she muttered.
“Just tell me this much. Is it going to make a difference, finding out whether I'm psychic?”
Isabel knew that was a serious question and answered it seriously. “You mean will I love you more if you can provide a shield for me? No. Being shielded for nearly twenty-four hours has taught me I'd rather be without one. I mean, nice place to visit now and then, but I really do feel like I've suddenly gone deaf, and I don't like it.”
“So if I am psychic and have somehow put a shield around your abilities, you're going to run to the ends of the earth to escape it?”
“I didn't say that. And no. We'll just figure out a way for one or both of us to control the damned thing, that's all. Having psychic abilities never makes life easier, but the whole point is learning to live with them.”
“So you'll love me either way?”
Isabel opened her mouth, then closed it. She allowed the silence to lengthen for a moment before saying, “You're very tricky.”
“Not tricky enough. Apparently.”
“Here's the place.”
Rafe smiled slightly but didn't say anything else as she pulled the car into the motel's secondary drive and around to the back of the building.
It was a somewhat seedy motel, an L-shaped single floor, and the neon VACANCY sign was flickering on the point of going dark. Only two cars were parked at the front; around the back there were half a dozen more scattered vehicles.
Isabel parked the unobtrusive rental beside a small Ford with a dented rear bumper, and they both got out. She went immediately to the room in front of the Ford and knocked quietly.
The door opened. “What, no pizza?”
“I forgot,” Isabel said apologetically, stepping into the room.
“You owe me one. Hey, Chief,” Paige Gilbert said. “Come on in.”
“We're just concerned,” Hollis told Ginny quietly.
The younger woman shifted a bit in her chair at the conference table, then said, “I appreciate that. I really do. But I'm fine. In a few more months, I'll have enough saved to move out on my own.”
“And until then?”
“Until then I'll just stay out of his way.”
“Like you did last night?” Hollis shook her head. “You've had enough training to know better, Ginny. He's mad at the world and you're his punching bag. He won't stop until somebody makes him.”
“When I move out—”
“He'll go back to beating your mother.”
“I didn't tell you that.”
“You didn't have to.”
Ginny slumped in her chair. “No. It's textbook, isn't it? He's a bully who beat her up until I got old enough to intervene, and now he hits me. When I'm not fast enough to stay out of his reach, that is. Usually, he's so drunk he passes out or knocks himself out trashing the house, at least now that he's older.”
“Your mother?”
“I haven't been able to talk her into leaving him. But once I'm out, I think she'll go live with her sister in Columbia.”
“And what will he do?”
“Go down the drain, probably. He hasn't had a regular job in years because of his temper. He's stupid and sullen and—like you said—mad at the world. Because, of course, it's not his fault that his life sucks. It's never his fault.”
“It isn't your fault,” Hollis said. “But when he goes too far and assaults someone else, or drives drunk and causes an accident, or does something else stupid and destructive, you'll blame yourself. Won't you?”
Ginny was silent.
“You're a cop, Ginny. You know what you have to do. Press charges, see that he's locked up or forced into some kind of treatment program, or whatever it takes to defuse the situation.”
“I know. I know that. But it's hard to . . .”
“To take it all public. Yes, it is. Maybe one of the hardest things you'll ever do. But doing it will take away his power. It's his shame you'll be showing the world, not yours. Not your mother's. His.”
Biting her bottom lip, Ginny said, “It's mostly the guys here that I think about. I mean, I took the training, I know self-defense, and