
Taken to the Edge
Autore
Kara Lennox
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Capitoli
16
CHAPTER ONE
IF ONE WILD TURKEY ON ICE didnât make the pain go away, maybe two would. That was Ford Hyattâs thinking when heâd ordered a second drink even though he needed to drive home. But two didnât work, either, and now heâd have to sit in this damn ugly bar for at least two hours while he sobered up.
This never worked. He just wasnât a drown-your-sorrows kind of guy. He was more of a go-fix-whatâs-wrong kind of guy, except there was no way to fix this, no arguing with the fact that a woman was in intensive care, and it was Fordâs fault.
His supposedly infallible instincts had failed him. Again.
âAnother?â The bartender nodded toward Fordâs empty glass.
âSure.â Hell, why not? In for a penny and all that. He could take a cab home.
He first became aware of the woman on the bar stool next to him when he smelled her perfume, a light, teasing scent. He looked over, surprised to find her there. Sheâd slid onto that stool as noiselessly as a cat.
âNeed someone to drown your sorrows with?â she asked.
How had she known? Maybe it was just a lucky guess. Guy drinking alone in a bar must have some sorrows.
âI donât need company, thanks,â he said. Or, more accurately, he doubted she would want his company inflicted on her. Under other circumstances, he might have responded to the flirtation. He gave her a second look from the corner of his eye. She was tall and long-legged, and dressed too nice for this dive. The fact she was hanging out alone at McGooâs meant he could probably have gotten her into bed without too much effort.
But the easy conquests of his youth held little appeal these days. Anyway, he was in a helluva mood. Being nice, even civil, would require too much effort.
She ordered her own drink, a diet cola, which made the bartenderâs grizzled eyebrows rise in surprise. Ford was amazed the bar stocked diet anything.
He gave the woman a third lookâand realized he knew her. He hadnât seen her in well over a decade, and sheâd changed quite a bit, filled out, darkened her hair a shade. But her eyes were the same, big and blue and innocentâdeceptively so, some had said.
âRobyn?â He would probably regret starting a conversation. But he had to say something.
âI wondered if youâd recognize me. Itâs been a long time.â No smile, but why should there be? Their history wasnât exactly warm and fuzzy.
âYou obviously recognized me,â he said, wondering why she would even bother acknowledging him.
âI heard you hang out here sometimes. Your numberâs not in the book and no one would give it to me.â
âCops seldom list their numbers.â God only knew how many wackos heâd arrested whoâd love to find him, get a piece of him.
âEx-cop now, isnât it?â
He nodded. âI left the Houston P.D. a couple of years ago.â
âWhyâd you leave?â The question sounded impulsive. âI mean, you were good at your job.â
âSays who?â
âWellâŚeveryone.â
âYouâve been asking?â
âItâs come up in conversation.â She paused to take a sip of her drink, and Ford found his gaze drawn to her lips pursing around the straw.
Idiot. Yeah, so heâd found her hot in high school. The bad girl, forbidden fruit. Always in trouble. Not someone he would have gotten involved with. But that hadnât stopped him from getting a hard-on every time he saw her. Stupid how powerful adolescent memories were. He could suddenly remember every nuance of what it had been like for him back then, wanting something he knew would be bad for him, something that didnât fit in with his ironclad plans for the future. Doing the right thing, but wishing he didnât have to.
He took a gulp of his drink. âAny particular reason people have been talking about me?â he asked.
âYes.â
The single word hung in the air, and he knew for sure that this was no chance encounter, not just curiosity on her part. Sheâd come here looking for him, and she had an agenda.
âI assume you know about me, right?â she asked, her gaze not meeting his. âYou heard what happened?â
Had anyone in Harris County missed hearing about the tragedy that had struck Robyn Jaspersonâs life? If they had, theyâd been living under a rock. âYes. Iâm sorry.â He didnât know what else to say. Stupid sentiment. Meaningless. But what could you say to a woman whose child had disappeared and was presumed dead? Nothing anyone said could make it better.
âThank you.â The rejoinder was automatic, probably uttered thousands of times since the tragedyâwhat, seven or eight years ago? At least theyâd caught the bastard who did itâŚ
That was when a disturbing possibility occurred to him. Oh, surely not. But the silence between them stretched uncomfortably.
He looked at her, and she met his probing gaze unflinchingly.
âDo you know why I wanted to speak to you?â
âIâm slow, but Iâm starting to get an idea.â
âYouâre not slow. In fact, most people agree that you are extraordinarily intelligent.â
âYou donât think Eldon did it?â he asked, incredulous. The D.A.âs case against Eldon Jasperson had been circumstantial, but it had been convincingâconvincing enough for twelve jurors.
âNo,â Robyn said succinctly. âI do not believe my ex-husband murdered my son.â
Without comment, Ford settled his bill and paid for Robynâs soft drink, too. âLetâs walk outside.â The stale-beer smell inside McGooâs suddenly turned his stomach. Maybe it was just that he didnât think some one as pretty and delicate looking as Robyn belonged in a place like this. McGooâs was close enough to the Houston shipping lanes that it attracted a rough clientele.
Outside, the air could hardly be called fresh. Summer in South Texas was never fresh, but the ninety-degree heat from earlier that afternoon had abated to a tolerable eighty or so, muggy as hell but not so bad that your clothes became drenched the moment you stepped outside.
A worn footpath ran alongside the twisty road where the bar was located. Without asking her permission, he led Robyn there. They could talk with out being overheard. He realized too late she wasnât wearing good walking shoes, just some teeny blue sandals with her jeans and silk T-shirt, but she didnât complain.
âWhy do you think that Eldon is innocent?â he asked point-blank. Project Justice, the charitable foundation he had worked forâuntil this afternoonâtook on only cases with significant evidence to work with. The mere belief that someone was innocent, no matter how passionate, was not enough to get Project Justice to take on a case. There had to be new evidence, or perhaps a new way of scientifically testing old evidence, to meet the foundationâs criteria.
âI have three things,â Robyn said. Clearly she had prepared for this meeting. âFirst, a witness saw Eldon with Justin at the pizza parlor where he said Justin was taken from. Because the witness had drunk a beerâone beerâand hadnât gotten every detail exactly right, the police dismissed him as a crank and never even provided his name to the defense. But you, as a former cop, know that memory is imperfect at best.â
âThatâs a good point,â he said. âAny reason this witness wasnât mentioned during Eldonâs appeals?â
âWeâve only just found him,â Robyn said.
âWe?â Fordâs ears perked up. He wondered whom she was working with. âAre you teamed up with Eldonâs lawyer?â
âFrankly, I have no money to pay a lawyer. âWeâ is myself and Trina Jasperson.â
âTrinaââ It took a few moments for Ford to get it. âEldonâs current wife?â
âThe one who broke up my marriage, yes.â Robyn misstepped, and Ford grabbed her arm to keep her from falling.
âMaybe we should turn back,â he said. âI didnât realize the footing was so bad on this path.â The mosquitoes were out, too. He waved away a couple that buzzed around his face.
âItâs okay. Letâs keep going.â
She probably wanted to prolong their meeting as long as possible to prevent him from walking away.
He took her arm again and firmly turned her around. âI wonât be responsible for you breaking your ankle. Donât worry, I intend to hear you out. Youâve piqued my curiosity.â Robyn and Trina, allies? Ford knew Trina Jasperson only by reputation, but that wasnât good. Sheâd been a party girlâpossibly a call girlâbefore Eldon married her. âFrankly, Iâm surprised Trina has stuck by him. She could have divorced him, gotten a huge settlement and moved on.â
âNot all women who marry rich men do so for the money,â Robyn said indignantly. âI didnât.â
âWhy did you marry Eldon?â Ford asked, then wished he hadnât. That hardly had any bearing on the case, and it was none of his business. But a detective never loses his strong sense of curiosity. Had she sought respectability? A stable environment to raise children? Was it just the money?
âHard as it is to believe, I loved him. He saw things about me that others missed, saw good qualities in me that I didnât even know were there. He was good to meâwell, to a point.â
She sounded comfortable with that answerâas if sheâd defended her position many times. âSorry. That was a rude question for me to ask.â
âIâll answer any question you askâanythingâif itâll help you free Eldon. He was hideously unfaithful, a serial cheaterâthatâs one of the things the prosecution used to tear down his character. But he was a terrific father, utterly devoted to Justin, and I love him for that. He grieved for his son, all the while having to go through that investigation, incarceration, the trial. To the public he looked stoic, perhaps even cold, but I knew him in a way most didnât, and he was devastated by the loss of his son.â
Ford knew that even murderers sometimes grieved for their victims. âIs that point number two?â
âIâm sorry?â
âYou said you had three reasons you believed Eldon is innocent. The first was the witness at the pizza parlor. Is the second the fact that Eldon grieved for Justin?â
âOh. No, I understood Project Justice wanted facts, evidence, not feelings. I was just answering your question.â
âWhat are the other two points?â
Her heel caught on a rock and she stumbled again. This time she was the one who reached out for his arm to keep from falling. When sheâd righted herself, she started to release him, but he grasped her hand and wrapped it around his bare forearm. âMaybe you better hold on till we get back to the parking lot.â
She didnât argue, and for the next couple of minutes, Ford found himself annoyed that he could not stop focusing on the feel of her warm, soft hand against his arm. How many times in high school had he vividly imagined sex with her? Yet heâd never thought about the experience of holding her hand, or listening to her talk, or the faint scent of that light, teasing perfume.
âThe second point I would like to bring up is the wig fiber,â she said, sounding more like an attorney than aâŚhe didnât know what she was now, other than I rich manâs ex-wife. âThe cops combed Eldonâs car bit by bit, and they found one lone fiber that didnât belongâa blond, synthetic wig fiber. They claimed it was insignificant, but I canât think of a single person Eldon or Justin came in contact with who wore a blond wig.â
Ford loved fiber evidence. In years past, forensic scientists could declare one synthetic fiber âconsistent withâ another. But as testing became more sophisticated, precise matches were more commonplace, particularly with something like a wig fiber. That was something he could sink his teeth into. âI like it,â he said. âBut as I recall, the cops found blood evidence in Eldonâs car, too.â
âA few tiny drops. Justin frequently had nose-bleeds.â
âOkay. Whatâs your third point?â
Robyn took a deep breath. âI believe Eldon was with someone that night, someone who could clear him. I know thereâs something heâs holding back. Thereâs a certain look he gets in his eyes when heâs lyingâŚabout a woman.â
Ford couldnât think what to reply to that. He had a healthy respect for a womanâs instincts, but this was hardly hard evidence.
âI know what youâre thinking,â she rushed on to say. âBut if I could just talk to him, I could convince him to come clean.â
âYou havenât talked to him?â
âThey wonât let me. And Trinaâshe knows nothing about the woman and Iâve hesitated to say anything to her. I donât want to be the one to tell her Eldon was cheating.â
âI could probably get you an interview with Eldon,â Ford found himself saying. The Project Justice lawyers were experts at negotiating prison regulations. âBut why in hell didnât he speak up about this woman, if she exists?â
âHe must have a reason. But Iâm positive she exists.â Robyn sounded like she was trying to keep the edge of desperation out of her voice.
âMaybe sheâs the one with the wig,â Ford said.
âExactly!â Right about then, Robyn realized she was still holding on to Fordâs arm, and she pulled her hand back self-consciously. She wiped her damp palm on the leg of her jeans. âIâm sorry. I forgot I was holding on to you like that.â
He hadnât forgotten. He still felt the ghost of her touch, like a brand on his forearm. âItâs okay.â He opened his mouth to tell her she could touch him any old time, then thought better of it. Sheâd come to him in a desperate frame of mind, and he would be lower than slime to take advantage of that.
âRobyn, it sounds like youâve got some sound reasons for reopening the case. Have you talked to the original investigators? The District Attorney who tried the case?â
âYes on both counts. Theyâre like brick walls. Maybe youâve never noticed this, but cops and D.A.âs donât like to admit they made a mistake. They particularly donât like to admit they sent an innocent man to death row. No matter what I hit them with, I get the same company line.â
ââWeâre positive the right man is behind barsâ?â Heâd uttered that one once or twice himself when he was on the other side of the fence, and at the time heâd meant it.
âThatâs the one.â
Heâd once been that arrogant, believed himself infallible. He was a smart cop, everyone said so. Careful, conscientious. And still, heâd helped send an innocent man to prisonâthen, two years later, freed a guilty one.
He refused to make any more mistakes.
âI suggest you submit Eldonâs case through the normal channels at Project Justice,â Ford said. âIâll put in a good word for it.â
âIâve already done that.â
Then why was she talking to him? Before he could voice the question, she answered it.
âThe application process can take months. Do you know the date of Eldonâs execution?â
It wasnât something Ford kept up with. âIâm afraid I donât.â
âJuly 18. Exactly two weeks and one day from today. Heâs running out of time, and youâre his only hope.â
âAh, hell.â If Ford hadnât been sober before leaving the bar, he was now. He walked back toward his big Crown Victoriaâthe same type of car heâd driven as a cop, purchased at a police auction. Old habits die hard. âYouâre not making this easy, you know.â
âI didnât intend to make it easy. An innocent manâs life is at stake.â
âRobyn, I no longer work for Project Justice.â
Her eyes widened in shock. âWhat? Since when?â
âSince this afternoon. I quit. But I could try to get Eldonâs case at the top of the pileââ
She shook her head. âI want you to handle it.â
âI canât.â
âWhy not? I donât understand.â
He wasnât going to explain it, either. But when heâd seen Katherine Hannigan lying in that hospital bed, literally black-and-blue, nearly murdered by a man Ford had helped to free, something had clicked inside his brain. He wasnât going to take peopleâs lives into his hands anymore.
âIâll plead your case tomorrow morning, first thing,â he said. âGive me your number. Someone will contact you within forty-eight hours.â
âI want you to handle it.â
In her chin-forward, clench-fisted stance, he caught a glimpse of that belligerent girl heâd known in school, the one who had so steadfastly maintained her innocence when sheâd been accused of a theft.
The one heâd wanted to believe.
âWhy me?â he wanted to know. âI thought you hated me.â
She flashed him the ghost of a smile, then sobered. My personal feelings for you are irrelevant. I know youâre determined. I know when you get a case in your teeth, you donât let it go. And after years of being lied to by lawyers and scammed by private investigators, after having cops and D.A.s cover their butts rather than get at the truth, I want someone on my team who will work hard, stay the course. Youâre the ideal candidate.â
Ford could hardly believe his ears. Why would Robyn Jasperson put so much faith in him? âHow do you know that about me?â
âI pay attention.â
They stared at each other, sizing up each otherâs resolve in the dimly lit parking lot as rowdy music from the barâs jukebox drifted out each time the front door opened.
âIâve changed,â he said softly, looking away.
âPeople donât change that much. Can you really walk away from a man whoâs going to die by lethal injection in little more than two weeks? If thereâs even a chance heâs innocent?â
Damn it. He couldnât. He wasnât sure how she knew that about him, but she did.
âIâll think about it.â He wouldnât make a promise he couldnât keep.
Â
FORD DIDNâT TRUST MANY people, but Daniel Logan was someone he did.
Daniel had no training as either a lawyer or a cop. But six years in federal prison maneuvering through the ins and outs of his various appeals had provided him quite an education.
With the help of his billionaire father, Daniel eventually had found a way to prove he was innocent of his business partnerâs grisly murder.
Given his freedom and a full pardon, Daniel had wanted nothing more than to help others who didnât belong in jail. Thus Project Justice was born. His father had financed the foundation and Daniel ran it, though the employees rarely saw him.
âI never liked the looks of that Jasperson case,â Daniel said after Ford had spent all day reading the trial transcript, then presenting his evidence to Daniel. They were in Danielâs study at his River Oaks mansion, which looked like NASAâs ground control, given all the computers and research paraphernalia.
Daniel, tall and lean with a world-weary look that made him seem older than his thirty-six years, sat behind one of those computers rapidly tapping at the keys as he spoke. âThe death of a child brings out the best and the worst in people. In this case, the people wanted blood. The cops and the D.A. gave it to them.â
âThe case was badly mishandled from the beginning.â Ford sat in a leather wingback chair, Danielâs one concession to comfort in his high-tech lair. âA guy like Jasperson could have afforded the best lawyer in the country, and he chose some school buddy who couldnât tell his ear from a leaf of cabbage.â
âJasperson was an arrogant idiot. He wasnât worried enough to hire the best. He was so sure he would beat the chargeâmaybe because he was innocent. Maybe because he thought he was clever.â
âI canât help thinking that if he were clever, heâd have done a better job staging a crime.â Once Ford had started checking things out, he felt his blood thrumming. He loved the challenge of a complex case, ferreting out the tiny points of illogic, the in consistencies everyone else overlooked.
âYou know as well as I that intelligent people do stupid, stupid things, especially in the heat of the moment.â
âSo whatâs the bottom line?â Ford asked, intensely aware that the evening was slipping away. He wanted to have an answer for Robynas soon as possible.
Daniel tapped a finger to his chin. âI think thereâs enough to warrant an investigation.â
Yes! âIâd like Raleigh to take the case. She has experience withââ
âRaleigh just took on the Simonetti case, the guy who supposedly shot his girlfriend.â
âWell, Joe Kinkaid, then. Heâs been asking forââ
âI gave him the Blanchard case this morning.â
Damn. Who did that leave? Project Justice wasnât a large foundation. They received far more requests each month than they could take on, and regrettably had to turn down cases even when the evidence seemed strong.
âWho, then?â
âWith your resignationâwhich I have not accepted, by the wayâweâre running at full capacity and then some. While I feel strongly that the Jasperson case should get some attention, I donât have anyone free. And I wonât have any of my people neglect a case theyâve already committed to. Nothing gets done half-assed around Project Justice.â
Ford knew that. No one got a job with the founation unless they were willing to work nights and weekends when called for. Daniel was passionate about his vocation, and he demanded that same dedication from his people.
âThe fact of the matter is,â Daniel said, looking up from the screen, âif you donât work this case, no one will.â He sighed. âI simply donât have the manpower.â
If it had been anyone else, Ford would have felt manipulated. However, Daniel Logan didnât play games, not with Ford anyway. If he said the personnel were stretched to the limit, then they were.
âWould you even want me to take this on?â Ford asked. âAfter the Copelson caseâŚâ He let that hang in the air.
âThe Copelson case was a mistake,â Daniel said.
âIt was worse than a mistake. Using my skills to get that animal out of jail was a crime. They should have put me behind bars.â
âDonât be melodramatic, Hyatt. The cops manufactured evidence on that case, and you proved it. He was unfairly convicted.â
âUnfairly convicted, and guilty as hell,â Ford muttered. He should have seen the guyâs rotten soul oozing out his pores.
âBetter to let a hundred guilty men go free than one innocent manââ
âI know the saying,â Ford said impatiently. It was emblazoned on the gold seal in the front foyer of the Project Justice offices. He wished he could be as calm and businesslike as Daniel, to simply admit a mistake, learn from it and move on. But Daniel hadnât seen Katherine Hannigan in the hospital, the savageries done to her body. âSo if I donât take the Jasperson case, no one will?â
âThatâs the truth, Iâm afraid.â
Damn it. âFine,â he gritted out. âIâll take it.â But at what cost to his soul, he didnât know.














































