Catch up on the previous chapters here
Nell groaned when the bell jingled shortly after Kent and Owen left, Kent to go to work and Owen to follow him and maybe sit in a slightly more comfortable chair for a while. “I really don’t want to see you,” she told Adam.
“If it makes you feel any better, I don’t really want to be here.” He came up to the counter instead of taking a seat. “I’ll take a large latte with an extra shot, but please don’t throw it in my face.”
“Tell me now, when I don’t have a hot drink in my hands.”
“Beckett wants to talk to you.”
Nell stopped moving, but she didn’t freeze. She wasn’t pure stone, either. There was magma running just under the surface.
“That’s not a surprise,” Adam admitted, “and nobody’s told him yes.”
“What have they told him?”
“That it’s absolutely off the table until he gives us a statement telling them everything they already know.”
She just looked at him.
“It’s not coercion,” he said, suddenly defensive. “First, we don’t even have to tell the truth, and second, they’re not telling him what they already know. Just saying they know it, so they’ll know if he starts and then leaves something out.”
Nell waited.
“And nobody’s committing to you agreeing, either. They’re just saying there’s no way he’s seeing you without doing all the rest first.”
She considered a moment longer and then turned to start the latte.
“They don’t actually know it’s you. They just know I’m the contact.”
And how long would it take someone to realize that Adam was spending a lot of time with her lately?
“Nell … I want to repeat that you’re safe, and this is over, and you don’t have to play a role in any of what comes next. You don’t,” he repeated when she turned back. “I don’t even have to keep you updated if you’d rather not know. All I have to tell them is that no, you won’t participate, and I’ll repeat it as many times as they need to hear it.”
Nell returned to the latte, and maybe it was the noise of the machine, but neither of them said anything until it was done and she put it on the counter. “I think you should keep me updated, and tell me how it’s going, but if I do come out and say no, then it’s no.”
Adam nodded. “Fair.”
She waved for him to put his wallet away. “You’re fine.”
“Can’t take favors.”
Nell gestured to the wall. “Grab a chip, then.”
“Nell.” He held out a twenty.
After a moment she took it, handing him both his change and his receipt. “Don’t tip me.”
“What if I take a chip and put it in the jar?”
“Then I take it and put it back up on the wall.” She nodded at his drink. “Is that all you came for?”
“I’m actually on my way home. They called me out to Des Moines.”
Her eyebrows went up and she swallowed back the protests—wait, when? Last night? And this isn’t on the most direct route back—but hey, beneath the haircut and the suit, he was still human. He wanted to tell her what he’d heard, because it wasn’t necessarily good. They’d caught Beckett, yes. Excellent. Well done. But Beckett wanted to talk to her.
They should have seen it coming, honestly. A man obsessed with her enough to first kill a string of people and then write a freaking novel wasn’t going to just say oh, okay, I guess that’s it, then.
She blinked. “Wait, does the publisher know what’s up?”
“Not from us. Officially, he’s in custody because of the assault. If he’s told anyone, I haven’t heard it.” Adam cocked his head and raised an eyebrow. “But they’ll find out soon enough, won’t they? When they go to meet his plane and he doesn’t show up to the first reading or whatever.”
Nell closed her eyes. “It’s just a whole new facet of the marketing. He doesn’t show, they can’t find him, where is he …?”
“Rosie found him first and murdered him?” Adam suggested, raising his cup to take a sip and then wincing. “Right, so … I wouldn’t leave town for a bit if I were you.”
“Kent’s mom thinks we should’ve moved back yesterday.”
“Um.” Adam cleared his throat. “Kent’s, uh … I mean, I know the ages thing isn’t … but he was a grown-ass adult long before I ever met him.”
Nell shook her head. “He’s her baby, and his sibs haven’t moved away. I stole him.”
“The guy who called his dad without consulting you and asked if there was anything he could do.”
She nodded.
“Because Kent’s first instinct was to pick you, except to him it didn’t even feel like picking you, because there was no other choice.”
Nell tilted her head.
Adam shrugged. “Don’t tell me you’ve never seen the way he looks at you.”
“… point.”
“I don’t even know if witness protection takes couples, and I was ready to argue it, but …” He shrugged again. “One look at the two of you and there’s no contest.”
She wrinkled her nose. “Unless you’re Donna.”
“Sure, because if she sees it, she’s no longer the center of his world. Owen, though … he’s got it figured out?”
Nell nodded.
“Good. Okay. I’ll update you when there’s something to update. Text if you need me to reassure you there’s nothing to pass on.”
What, now he was showing a high emotional intelligence? “Thanks.”
He raised his cup. “Thanks for the coffee. Do you think Kent will want me to swing by the library and tell him what’s going on?”
“I think he’s far more likely to need a punching bag after hearing it, so I’ll tell him later.”
“Fair. Okay. Don’t panic if you don’t hear from me for a while. Just, you know … live life.”
Now there was a loaded sentence. Nell nodded and waved, but what did that even mean? Maybe Donna thought Kent should’ve been in a holding pattern these past few years, but, in a way, hadn’t they been? They’d married, but that wasn’t exactly as planned, and they hadn’t turned the discussion back to kids because there was that almost-spoken agreement that they’d keep up with both the pill and the condoms until this thing was solved. Imagine the faceless stranger showing up when Nell was pregnant, or using their baby against her. The risk just hadn’t been worth it, but now … even last night …
Okay and maybe she didn’t need to be thinking about last night when she was out in public and a customer could walk through the door at any moment, catching her daydreaming and then blushing furiously. It was probably a good thing that thinking about Kent still made her feel this way, after all this time together, but she didn’t really need everyone to know where her mind was going.
Especially when that next person was Art. “Any visits from your suited friends today?” he greeted her.
“Yeah. Both, individually. One’s headed back to his office and one’s camped out in the library.”
“Are you still under surveillance or …?”
Nell slouched over the counter. “Kent’s mom thinks we should’ve moved back yesterday, his dad realizes we actually have lives here, and Adam’s waiting for the official request for me to speak to Beckett.”
Art paused and seemed to run that through his head again. “The serial killer. The guy who killed a bunch of people, forced you to …” He gestured vaguely around them. “And wrote that whole book. That guy. They’re going to let that guy talk to you.”
“Adam thinks they’re going to use me as a carrot to get that guy talking about killing a bunch of people, because I don’t think they have a single scrap of evidence for any of them.” At least nothing that would conclusively point to Beckett. Maybe they knew the killer wore gloves or something, but there were already two people sentenced for two of the murders, and one of the remaining deaths had been filed as an accident.
“And does Adam think you should be a good little carrot?”
She shook her head. “He said he doesn’t even have to pass it on when they ask him if I don’t want him to.”
“But you haven’t said no yet.”
Nell raised an eyebrow.
“That’s your inside line into figuring out what’s up,” he explained. “You want to keep that open until you’ve got the confirmation, and then you can slam that door. Although I, for one, hope you aren’t actually looking at moving.”
She shook her head. “Kent doesn’t want to, either.”
“Good. Because a lot of us like you right here.”
“Even though we’ve lied to you?” Nell hadn’t exactly planned on asking, but it seemed to be pulled out of her.
Art just shrugged. “You had a damn good reason. And lying about your past doesn’t necessarily mean lying about who you are today. Right?”
Nell nodded, but she wanted to protest, even if that meant arguing Art should change his mind.
“And, look, Nell …” He tilted his head. “It’s not like we’ve really talked about that stuff.”
No, she just gave him her new paperwork instead of the old.
He considered her for a long moment. “Do you have family back home?”
“A grandmother. That’s it.”
“And Kent’s got a bunch, it sounds like. All close.”
She nodded.
“Okay. You’ve hardly ever taken time off, so … when the family reunion happens … just let me know what hours I have to fill.”
Nell wrinkled her nose. “I’m not sure I’m invited to that reunion.”
“Too bad for his mom that Kent shows up with you, or he doesn’t show up at all. You two missed game night last week. Are you coming tomorrow?”
“I don’t know how long Owen’s staying.”
Art laughed. “I almost told you to bring him along. Just let me know.”
Nell nodded, but a group of teenagers came in, laughing and talking in the newest TikTok slang, so Art hustled into his office and she turned to them to ask what she could get started.
Chapter Thirty-Six – coming February 5