“I have some mildly disturbing news, although not sure it’ll come as a shock to all of us.”
“What is it?” Connor asked, then held his breath. Come on, give him something.
“I know why Stepdaddy Dickhead, aka Luther O’Dea, was at the courthouse yesterday.” She sent Connor an uneasy look. “He was petitioning for a conservatorship. A mental health one, specifically.”
A conservatorship. Giving him control over Erin’s money. Her decisions. Connor ground his molars together, wishing he’d given in and gone after the bastard when he had the chance, even though deep down her knew nothing could have prevented him from chasing Erin.
“As it turns out, Erin is filthy stinking rich and Stepdaddy D wants control over the cash flow.” She glanced around the room, holding up what looked like a bank statement. “Was everyone aware of this but me? I could have hit her up for some grocery money.”
“I knew,” Connor muttered. It was obvious from the captain’s expression that his squad member’s financial status had been the one thing of which he hadn’t been aware. Connor reached for the files he’d brought. “I don’t give a shit if she’s a billionaire, but no one is going to take what belongs to her.”
“Well,” Polly hedged. “That’s where it gets sticky.”
Bowen stood. “Jesus, sometimes I wish I hadn’t quit smoking.”
Connor crossed his arms. “Sticky how?”
Polly spun the laptop in their direction. “The petition Stepdaddy D turned in yesterday had Erin’s signature on it.”
“She never would have signed something like that,” Derek said. “I could barely get her to sign a W-9.”
“If I had to guess, based on the type of petition—”
“He could claim she signed it and doesn’t have the capacity to remember,” Connor finished for Polly, holding the bridge of his nose. His stomach was churning so hard, he was going to be sick. “How the fuck did the guy find her? She’s smart. Knows how to avoid being found. She wouldn’t have used credit cards. She doesn’t have a cell phone to track. How?”
No one had an immediate answer, so each of the men flipped open a file while Polly continued to punch away on her laptop. The file Connor had picked detailed her two stints in Dade. It didn’t contain any information he didn’t already know…until the end.
Total consecutive days spent in solitary confinement: seventy-two.
Bile rose in his throat. Dammit to hell. No wonder. No wonder she had a fear of being trapped. She’d been treated like an animal so often in her life, her bravery, the way she faced a world that had betrayed her, amazed him. He thought of her smile that morning in the courthouse, the tears in her eyes when he’d withheld his body from her, and he felt himself crack. It might as well have been a visible, jagged line down the center of his chest.
“Whoa.” Polly shook her head at the laptop screen. “He’s a psychiatrist? That’s kind of ironic, no?”
“I’ve said it before.” Bowen flipped a page. “Not helping.”
“Wait. A psychiatrist?” Connor leaned back in his chair, remembering the other night. The first night he’d made love to Erin. I’m on the shot. “Would that give him access to medical records? If Erin had a physical when she reached Chicago, if she was prescribed medication, the information would have been recorded somewhere. If he searched hard enough, he’d find it.”
Polly heaved a breath. “The search wouldn’t have been that hard if he had any type of skill.”
Derek pulled his cell phone from his pocket. “You’re wrong, Polly. Those medical records are sealed. He would have had to do a lot of digging, maybe call in a favor or two. I don’t leave loose ends like this.”
“Will he have this address?” Connor demanded to know. “Is this address on her medical forms?”
“No.” Derek shook his head. “We rented this place after she underwent the physical.”
Bowen shoved a hand through his hair, looking thoughtful. “My half sister’s boyfriend…he’s a cop. When he was shot last year, he had to see a shrink afterward for weeks. Mandatory-like. Is there any way this guy has access to police records or a database somehow that way?”
“Like maybe he works with cops?” Polly’s fingers flew over the keyboard. Her eyebrows shot up a second later. “Holy shit. He’s the mental health counselor for Miami PD.”
“Jesus Christ,” Connor gritted out and began to pace. “If he’s in contact with cops looking to skip out on mandatory counseling, it wouldn’t be a stretch for him to call in a