Catch up on the previous chapters here
Part Seven: Release Day
Art looked around when he came in, but the tables were empty. “Nothing?” he asked, almost incredulously.
Nell shrugged. “What did you expect?”
“Him to fold like wet cardboard.” He came around the counter and went right to the espresso machine.
“The guy who played a long game and wrote an entire freaking novel?”
“Dahmer folded,” Art argued. “Bundy folded. There’s a long list of people who murdered for years and then …” He snapped his fingers.
She didn’t think that was the sound of wet cardboard folding.
“Kent and his dad out fishing or something?”
“Fishing?” Was he so distracted that he’d forgotten where they lived?
Art waved that away. “Some sort of male bonding whatever. Two dudes off doing dude stuff.”
“I’m not sure where they are or what they’re doing, but yeah, Owen’s hanging out with him today.” Possibly discussing Donna and how they, as a group, were going to handle everything moving forward.
At least Owen called them Kent and Nell. He’d been thinking of them that way for years, which gave him a head start on the rest of his family, and maybe he’d also tried to explain to Donna why, exactly, they couldn’t just flip back to their old names.
Art sighed. “Sorry. However frustrated I am with all of this …”
“Some of us have been frustrated with the lack of progress for years now.”
He shook his head slowly. “You’re, um … you’re good at keeping secrets.”
“Alternately, you’ve only known me frustrated, so you’ve got nothing to compare it to.”
Art tilted his head, considering. “Fair. Plus, well … you had every reason to keep your secret. Getting close to someone could get them killed.”
She shivered and crossed her arms, shaking her head to forestall his apology. “Like that hasn’t been on my mind this entire time, either. This whole thing is just …” But she didn’t have a way to finish that sentence.
“It’s entirely too unbelievable that it would wrap up?” he suggested.
Nell nodded slowly. “And, even then … God, I just …” She glanced around, but there wasn’t anyone here, and if the place was bugged, it wasn’t like she’d see the mics. “Even prison doesn’t feel sure enough. He could still … someday …”
Art nodded like she wasn’t telling him anything new. “Even having that photo … I’d be worried I wouldn’t recognize him if I saw him on the street.”
“Hard same.”
“But there’s probably, uh …” Art set his cup on the counter and leaned his elbows next to it, eyes on the door. “There’s no proof then, huh? Or else …”
“Michigan doesn’t have the death penalty.”
He sucked air in through his teeth. “A life sentence?”
“Eligible for parole after ten or fifteen years.”
“Damn. And he’s pretty young, right? So ten or fifteen …”
God, she actually felt herself relax at his response. All it took was his frustration and she was validated. Kent felt the same way, sure, and she was pretty sure Owen did, too, but those guys were practically required to feel that way. They were supposed to be protective and ready with teeth and claws. The fact that Art joined in, though … that helped a lot.
“So …” Art picked up his cup and swirled the contents. “What can I do?”
“Sorry?” She looked around like maybe she’d forgotten to wipe down the tables.
“I don’t know, to make this easier, or make time pass faster, or something. Just … what can I do to help? You want more hours to distract you, or less, or just …?”
Nell blinked as something occurred to her. “Hey, so what’s up with the book launch tour, then?”
“The …?” Art blinked, too, and shook his head. “I haven’t heard anything. Haven’t asked, either. Maybe I should, but …” He frowned. “Everyone thinks he’s just been arrested for the assault, right?”
So he was going to get out on bail or something and still be able to do his cross-country tour? Nell pulled out her phone and Googled Bentley Beckett. They had to be speculating about why he assaulted an agent, right? Especially since they were speculating about whether they should really continue to #FindRosie and all the rest. If Rosie were real, and if the real Rosie was wanted for murder, and then Beckett went and beat up an FBI agent badly enough to land him in the hospital …
She didn’t find what she wanted after a quick scroll so she tried Bentley Beckett book tour instead. That search pulled up a list of locations and options for buying tickets, followed by a couple questions about whether the first nights were still on, but …
“Looks like they haven’t canceled anything yet,” Art mused. “They’ve put so much into him, though, so I guess I’m not surprised.”
At some point serial killer had to outweigh massive investment, right?
“I’ll email and cancel anyway, though.”
“Is that going to cost you something?” Had they asked for some sort of down payment?
Art snorted. “He was caught ready to take a standing lamp to an agent in this very state, so I’m pretty sure they’ll just say okay, thanks, and that’ll be it.”
She looked out at the walls, both the pending connections and the pending food, the second emptier than the first. They really could’ve used the free advertising, but …
But. The Loneliest Number was about an author who wanted to #FindRosie so he could … well. Nell didn’t think Beckett wanted to kill her, but he’d certainly hurt her, and justify it to himself in the process.
That was really the most insidious part to her: that he could justify it. Could, and did, for five murders, and she’d be damned if she wanted to give him a chance at any more. Honestly, he’d already taken so much from her, and there was damn little left. If Kent hadn’t come with her, just dropped all else and thrown everything into the two of them …
Art nudged her shoulder with his own. “Help me think of some new advertising campaign.”
“Yeah? What’s your budget line read for that?”
“There’s no line. No room for one, either. Our plan’s got to be less than cheap—I’m thinking free.”
“Something that takes up your time and energy isn’t actually free,” she sniffed.
“Fine, then think of something that takes up someone else’s time and energy.”
Nell shrugged. “We should hook up with the library and do a blind date with a book thing.”
“I’m sorry?”
“You wrap up books and write fun things on the outside to hint at what they are, so people check them out and unwrap them. We could pair them with drink recommendations and then just … I don’t know, people hang out and read here for a while.” She shrugged again. “At least I’m pitching.”
“No, I like it. The …” He pointed to the connections wall. “It fits. Wouldn’t they have to check them out at the library?”
“There has to be an app. If other places have bookmobiles, there’s got to be a way we can do this.”
Art nodded slowly. “I’ll ask Brandon. He owes me. Although …” His grin was a little wry. “Maybe not as much as he did when we all thought C. J. O’Connell was just some author with a much-hyped book.”
“Yeah, I think he’s still working through the stages of grief on that one.”
“There’ll be another moving bestseller to tug at his heartstrings that wasn’t written by a murderer. He’ll get over it.”
Nell laughed. “Still might be a while before you can get him on board with the blind date thing.”
“Brandon’s a romantic who wears rose-colored glasses and his heart on his sleeve. If we call it blind dates, he’s in.” Then, at her raised eyebrow, he laughed. “I’m not romantic in the least, but I’ve made studies.”
“Studies.” She almost didn’t want to know.
Art smiled. “I’m not saying my Google history has a 3 a.m. search for how to convince a romantic of something he doesn’t want to do, but I’m not saying I’ve never looked that up, either. Blind date with a book,” he repeated, nodding slowly. “That’s good. We should make it just one part of a whole …”
“Scheme?” she suggested.
“Marketing plan,” he countered, smile broadening. “Keep thinking on it. I’m sure we’ll get something better than that damn book.”
Nell rolled her eyes. “What, like it’s hard?”
Art grinned. “Oh, good. You’re back.”
Was she? Or was she just back to whatever sort of normal she’d been before he’d ever handed her a copy of Since You Went Away? It wasn’t really possible to go all the way back, was it? Not while Beckett’s sentence was pending and he would, one day, be released.
Maybe Art caught some of this on her face because he hesitated, but he went on back to his office when she shook her head to tell him no, she didn’t want to talk about it just now, thanks.
It wasn’t something she’d ever really want to talk about.
Chapter Forty – coming February 9