Cut and Run (Lucy Kincaid #16) - Allison Brennan Page 0,137

it was all that easy.”

“You call this case easy?” Jennifer laughed. “We need something so solid the lawyer can’t wiggle out of the noose.”

“Has Mitch Corta come in?”

“No.”

“He hasn’t come to our office, either,” Lucy said. “Sean thought he’d convinced himself to turn over everything he has. He doesn’t have hard proof of any crimes, but he has some firsthand knowledge of the money-laundering operation and documentation that would be valuable to our White Collar unit. He needs to go on record.”

“Should we put an APB out on him?”

“I don’t know.”

“He didn’t kill her, so what he has or doesn’t have isn’t going to help me make a case against Faith Parker. But if he’s an accessory—”

“We need to question him, but we don’t have anything tangible about his involvement, other than Sean’s unofficial statement.” Lucy snapped her fingers. It had been a long day—a long week. “I almost forgot. Mitch told Sean that Harrison and Victoria had been having an affair—a long-running affair ever since he returned to Texas.”

“That’s why they divorced?”

“I don’t know. Sean didn’t go into details, other than to say that he believed the divorce was amicable and Mitch claimed that he was in a relationship with Stan and that Victoria knew about it.”

“That explains a lot.”

“It does?”

“I have a copy of Stan’s will. Everything he has—and that’s up to the lawyers to decide what was ill-gotten gains and what wasn’t—is to be split fifty-fifty between his sister and Mitch Corta. It was written three years ago.”

* * *

Grover Mills didn’t want to disturb his wife. It was nearly nine at night, and she was getting ready for bed.

Lucy wasn’t backing down. They needed to find Simon Mills.

Lucy said, “Max Revere was run off the road this afternoon because she was investigating your son and Harrison Monroe. She could have been killed. As it is she has a concussion, cracked ribs, and a broken ankle.”

He closed his eyes. “She asked today if we wanted the truth, the good and the bad. We told her yes. We told her we needed to know or we couldn’t put this chapter of our lives behind us.”

“That’s what Max does. She finds the truth. This time, the truth got her hurt. She learned at the recorder’s office that both Simon and Harrison profited when Kiefer lost the federal public works project. She didn’t know what everything she read meant, and she was bringing it down to the FBI for further analysis when she was run off the road.”

“She’s okay, right?”

He was genuinely concerned.

“Yes,” Lucy said. “Her boyfriend took her back to her hotel. You should also know that we have another suspect in Victoria’s murder.”

Judith came down the stairs at that point. “Who?” she asked.

The woman looked frail, especially in a bathrobe and slippers. Grover helped her down the last few steps. “Are you sure you want to hear this, sweetheart?” Grover asked his wife.

“Please, tell us the truth,” Judith said. “I can take the truth. I can’t take any more lies.”

Grover kissed her on the head and escorted her to a chair in the formal living room. He motioned for Nate and Lucy to take a seat.

It was generally not wise to tell family who a suspect was if that suspect was not in custody, but this time she made an exception.

“We have evidence that points to Faith Parker Monroe,” Lucy said. “SAPD hasn’t made an arrest, but she will be questioned shortly. However, we are also looking for your son Simon.”

“Simon? He wouldn’t—couldn’t—kill anyone, especially Victoria. His own sister.”

“He’s not a suspect in her murder, but we believe that he has information about the Albright family.”

Grover looked stunned, then tears fell from Judith’s eyes.

“Where might Simon go if he wanted to get away for a while? Is there a property we might not know about? We checked every property that he owns.”

Judith nodded. “We have a cabin in Horseshoe Bay. He would often go there to get away, usually alone. To think.”

“I’ll get the address,” Grover said heavily. He rose slowly, then turned back to Lucy and Nate. “Are you certain? Did he … he didn’t kill those children, did he?”

“I don’t know,” Lucy said. “But based on what we’ve learned, he knew at least after the fact.”

And she knew then exactly how to get Simon Mills to talk.

Chapter Thirty-seven

It took an hour for Nate and Lucy to drive to Horseshoe Bay. It was in Llano County, and they contacted the sheriff’s office for backup.

A lone light was

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