After all, this was California. Some areas moved more than others. If there had been regular minor tremors or just simple shifting, that could have made the headstone move and lean as if it had had one too many.
Reaching out, Moira touched the headstone. She immediately saw that it was not only listing, it was downright loose. That took effort.
Human effort.
Could the people who had knocked her down been grave robbers?
Grave robbers? Moira, this is Aurora. Nobody even touches a headstone if they can help it.
Yet what other explanation could there be? This needed further examinationâbut not at this moment, Moira sternly reminded herself. She had someplace to be.
Taking off from the cemetery to avoid being late to work, Moira made herself a promise to come back as soon as she could today to investigate the scene thoroughly.
Emily Jenkins had been violatedâor at least her grave had.
What she needed to find out was why.
* * *
Moira made it back to her home in what amounted to a new record, at least for her. Her lungs were near bursting as she shed her clothes all the way to the shower, littering the floor with them.
Jumping into the glass enclosure, she turned on the water before she had even securely locked the shower door. Five very swift minutes later she was toweling herself dry, leaving tiny pools of water to mark her path to her closet.
She had no time for breakfast or the life-affirming coffee she usually swore by. Instead, dressed, Moira was back out on the pavement less than twelve minutes after she had first inserted her key into her condoâs front door.
She hoped she could find something edible and at least vaguely nutritious in the vending machines at the station. She had her doubts.
Pulling into the stationâs rear parking lot, Moira could have sworn she saw someone who vaguely reminded her of the dark-blond stranger who had helped her to her feet.
At least, he resembled the man from the rear, which was the only view she had at the moment. Tall, dark blond and broad shoulders, he could have been the stranger from the cemetery.
Or, more likely, just another private citizen coming to the station to lodge a complaint or to respond to a call from one of the many police detectives inhabiting the building.
Her curiosity still on high alert, Moira quickened her pace in an attempt to catch up with the blond stranger.
He entered the building before she did. Moira stepped up her pace again.
As she got into the building, she discovered that not only should she have quickened her pace, she should have increased it to a sprint. The stranger she was trying so hard to get a better look at was nowhere to be seen.
âMust have caught an elevator,â she told herself under her breath.
It was either that or accept the explanation that the stranger had vanished into thin air. She preferred the elevator.
âYou know, they say the mindâs the first to go for some police detectives. Of course, thatâs assuming that they have a mind to lose, which, in your case, the jury is still out about.â
Moira didnât have to turn around to know who was talking to her. But sheâd learned a long time ago that ignoring her brother and pretending he wasnât there didnât make him go away. If anything, it just made Malloy up his ante.
With a sigh, she turned around to face him. âI see that someone woke up on the right side of the bed this morning.â The smile she forced to her lips looked deliberately phony by all accounts.
The grin on the tall, handsome detectiveâs face was, according to more than half the female population, incredibly enticing.
âActually, little sister,â he told her with a wicked wink, âit was on the right side of the lovely Patricia Morgan, but why quibble over words?â
âWhy indeed?â Moira asked crisply, striding toward the elevator quickly.
She knew there was no losing her brother, but for the sake of the game,