Sense of Evil - Kay Hooper [95]
“You might get that reaction at first,” Hollis admitted. “Not because they think you aren't capable, but because they wouldn't have become cops if they didn't want to help people. Protect people. Especially one of their own. But you'll show them, in time. Earn another marksman's medal or another belt in your karate classes, and they'll notice.”
“How did you know—”
“A little birdie told me.” Hollis smiled. “Look, the point is that you have friends. And they'll be supportive. But this is not the time to back off, to avoid taking action against your father. With this killer on the loose, everybody's on edge and in full defensive mode. If your father pushes anybody the wrong way, he's likely to provoke a situation with a tragic outcome.”
“You're right.” Ginny got to her feet and managed a smile. “Thank you, Hollis. And thank Isabel for me, will you? If you hadn't said something, I probably would have let this go on, and God knows what might have happened.”
“You have friends,” Hollis repeated. “Including us. Don't forget that.”
“No. No, I won't. Thanks.” She went quietly from the conference room.
Hollis sat there frowning in silence for a moment, her gaze fixed on the bulletin boards covered with photographs and reports, then reached for her cell phone and punched in a number.
“Yeah.”
“I know this isn't a good time,” Hollis said, “but when you've finished up there, ask Rafe about the McBrayer household, will you? He might know just how volatile Hank McBrayer is, how dangerous.”
“She's going to press charges?”
“I think so. And I have a very bad feeling about how he might react.”
“Okay. Keep her busy there, if you can; she might feel the need to go confront him before she takes official action.”
“Shit. Okay, I will. Oh—and we've got a small lead on Kate Murphy; after the latest round of radio announcements asking for help, a witness came forward to report he thinks he might have seen her getting on a bus the day she disappeared. We're checking it out.”
“Good. It'd be nice to know we aren't looking for another body. Yet.”
“I'll say. How's it going there?”
“I'll fill you in when I get back.”
“That bad, huh?”
“Tense is the word I'd use. Talk to you later.”
“Is who going to press charges?” Rafe asked as Isabel ended the call.
“Tell you later.”
He frowned at her. “I am not tense.”
Isabel lifted both brows at Paige.
“He's tense,” Paige said.
Rafe, sitting on one of the two rather unsteady chairs near the front window, rubbed the back of his neck and stared at the two women warily. “I'm still trying to deal with you being a fed,” he told Paige. “And the fact that you've been here longer than Isabel.”
Isabel shook her head. She was sitting in the other rickety chair, both of which faced Paige, who sat on the bed. “I'm still pissed at Bishop for that part of it. All the time I was arguing with him about sending me down here, and he already had an agent in place—and had sent her here right after the first murder, even before you asked for a profile.”
“Not much gets past him,” Paige reminded Isabel. “Neither of them has said, but I get the feeling he and Miranda keep an eye on any investigations that might even possibly involve any of the killers in our cold-case files. Hell, Kendra probably wrote a program for them purely to do that—scan all the police and law-enforcement databases looking for specific details or keywords.”
“He might have told me,” Isabel said.
“And he might have told Hollis why she was supposed to make sure Rafe knew you understood Latin. Of course, if he had, then she might have been self-conscious about what she was doing, and Rafe might have picked up on the wrong part of the conversation, and you might never have had to bring him to me to find out if he's psychic because he'd be dead.”
“If my vote counts,” Rafe said, “I vote we let Bishop continue to do things his own way.”
“Okay, point taken. But Hollis is right: one of