Joe was waiting for a plea bargain or something.â
âDid they ever find out who killed him?â
âNo.â
âDid you kill him?â
âNo.â
âLook at me. Wick? Look. At. Me.â
I grit my teeth, turn to Hart. Iâm careful to keep my face blank, but I canât stop my fingers from digging into the smooth leather seats. If he looks down, heâll see and heâll know.
âLet me ask it this way,â Hart says. âWere you involved in killing him?â
âOf course not.â
Hart twists to face me fully. âYou lie beautifully.â He turns the folder around and pushes it toward me. âHere. Look. This is what we think happened.â
My stomach tilts. The entire folder is dedicated to me. There are picturesâLily with me; Bren with me; my best friend, Lauren, with meâand reports. Someone had been watching, cataloging everything: my visit to Joe, Lilyâs attack by one of Joeâs men, how I went to see Michael the next day.
That was sloppy of me, but Iâd been too panicked to wait. One of Joeâs grunts had jumped my sister on her way home from school. She was terrified and I knew Joe was getting out. Heâd struck some deal with the Feds and once he was free . . . well, it didnât take much imagination to know what would happen next.
Yes, it was noted by the police that I visited both men. Yes, until then, I had never visited either of them. But without anyone knowing about Lilyâs attack, I was prettysafe. Lily covered for me, for us . And without anyone able to connect my visits . . . well, it was fairly easy to explain everything away.
Except apparently Hartâs people did connect it. They figured out Lily was the hidden piece.
I close the folder, feel cold sweat roll beneath my clothes.
âNow,â Hart says, leaning closer. âTell me what really happened.â
âJoe killed my mother. He knew she was informing on my dadâon him âso he dragged her to the top of an unsecured building, told her if she didnât jump he would kill my sister and me.â
âAnd what did you do with that information?â
âI told Michael.â It sounds so innocent when I say the words like that, but itâs not. I did not put the knife in Joeâs stomach, but by telling Michael, I might as well have.
âAnd you knew your dad would respond like that?â Hart asks.
âI had a hunch.â
âInteresting. Do you think he loved her?â
I blink, try to fit my head around Hartâs sudden detour. âMichael beat my mother. Badly. Thatâs not love.â
âMaybe for him it was. He could destroy her, but no one else could.â
I sneak a sideways glance at Hart. Something ahead of us has caught his interest, and in this unguarded moment he looks different. Without the smile, Hartâs face is hard,angular . . . watchful. His skinâs pale and a little waxy like he doesnât see sunshine much. And as I watch, his right hand drifts backward, like heâs thinking of going for his pocket . . . or his gun.
It stops, but he continues to watch the window. Whatever heâs seen bothers him, but I canât tell what it is.
âAre we being followed?â I ask.
Hart considers me. âI want to lie and say no . . . but, somehow, I think that would be a very big mistake with you.â
A tiny part of me likes Hart more for recognizing this. It would be a mistake because I could never trust him again. But I donât get the chance to tell him anything because just as I open my mouth, an SUV slams into us.
3
Our car fishtails to the left as the SUV plows into our right and keeps coming.
The force slings me to my side, the seat belt slicing into my ribs. I brace one hand against the seat and suck in a single breath before weâre hit again.
Hart swears, scrounges for something on the floorboard. I donât know how he can even move. My seat