Sins of the Past Read online




  Missing © 2016 by Dee Henderson

  Shadowed © 2016 by Dani Pettrey

  Blackout © 2016 by Lynette Eason

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan

  www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

  Ebook edition created 2016

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.

  ISBN 978-1-4412-3026-3

  These novellas are works of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Cover design by LOOK Design Studio

  Dani Pettrey represented by Books & Such Literary Agency

  Lynette Eason represented by The Steve Laube Agency

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Missing by Dee Henderson

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  Shadowed by Dani Pettrey

  Prologue

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  Epilogue

  Blackout by Lynette Eason

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  About the Authors

  Back Ads

  Back Cover

  ONE

  John Graham, police chief for Cheyenne, Wyoming, knew the value of remaining calm in a crisis. He’d learned that during the early days of his career working undercover, when often it was his own life on the line. But he could feel that control slipping now as he strode down the O’Hare Airport concourse.

  His mother was missing. The last confirmed sighting of her was Monday afternoon around 4:30 p.m. at the retirement village where she lived. It was now going on 9:00 p.m. Tuesday. That was too many hours for a son to take without it causing a great deal of internal turmoil.

  People moved out of his way, either the grim set to his face or the pace of his stride making it clear he wasn’t a man they wanted to slow down.

  “Chief Graham.”

  He spotted a dark-haired slender woman in a police jacket aiming in his direction, and he moved across the traffic flow to meet her, accepting her handshake. Her fingers were chilled. He wondered briefly where her gloves were on a cold December evening in Chicago.

  “I’m Lieutenant Sharon Noble with the Riverside PD. I’m very sorry about your mother,” she said, sounding genuinely concerned. “I’m primary on the case. I figured it would be faster to fill you in on the drive than have you face a fifty-person search and try to get an orderly sense of what is happening. Do you have checked bags?”

  He tipped his head toward his carry-on. “This is it.”

  “I’ve got a squad car waiting.”

  She sounded competent, and he felt just a bit of the stress lift.

  She aimed for the terminal entrance without more than a pause in her stride. “I’ve got a concealed-carry permit if you require it,” she said over her shoulder.

  She was skirting TSA flight regulations and indirectly asking if he’d brought a gun with him while smoothly indicating she wasn’t going to slap his wrist for the infraction. He appreciated her even more. He’d left his duty weapon along with his badge with his deputy chief. “We don’t have her back in a few hours, I’ll take you up on that and will be carrying.”

  “With what I’ve already learned about Martha Graham, I’m guessing she raised a smart son.”

  “Smart enough.”

  “While you were in the air I confirmed your alibi for the last forty-eight hours.”

  He narrowed his eyes but nodded. “You didn’t make lieutenant by not checking the obvious. Dad left her comfortably well-off. I’ll inherit, but I don’t plan on doing so for another twenty years.”

  “I got that impression when I saw the list of phone calls between Chicago and Cheyenne. I’m told you two are close. All right, continuing to rule out family, she has a sister in Boulder, Colorado, and a cousin in Wichita, Kansas. Your late father has a younger brother and sister living in Boston, Massachusetts. Anybody significant I’m missing?”

  “That’s the list.”

  They stepped out into a below-freezing night, and a car’s lights in the pick-up lane flashed. John wore a sheep’s-wool-lined coat, heavy gloves, and boots that could handle whatever snow was on the ground. She was in a lined police jacket with freezing hands and uncovered hair, wearing tennis shoes and hoping for traction. He’d like to at least offer the gloves, but she was already headed toward the Riverside Police squad car. She opened the rear door for him, grabbed his duffel bag and dropped it into the trunk, then circled the car to the other side. He ducked his head and climbed in while she also settled into the backseat.

  “Officer Jefferies,” she said, leaning forward, “this is John Graham, the police chief for Cheyenne, Wyoming.”

  “Nice to meet you, sir.” The driver handed back a drink carrier. Sharon accepted it and the sack that followed. “We have hot coffee and a mega sub sandwich for you, John, while you listen for the next twenty minutes.”

  Officer Jefferies turned on the overhead lights for the backseat and quickly cut through the airport traffic. Sharon handed over a hot coffee and took the other for herself, wrapping both hands around it. Though John wasn’t hungry, he took the sandwich from the sack, knowing food made it possible to run longer and harder on this job. “I’ll listen without interrupting.”

  “Appreciate it. Here’s what I know, in contrast to what I suspect. Your mother played bridge Monday afternoon at the home of a Mrs. Emily Chestnut—a nice name for the Christmas season,” she mentioned with a smile. “Martha left there shortly after 4:30 p.m. Your mother’s car is presently in the parking lot of the Riverside Retirement Village, in her normal parking place in front of Building Number One. The security gate for the complex is closed at 10:00 p.m., and a guard clears traffic in after that hour. The man on the gate remembers your mom’s car being parked there when he went on duty Monday night.

  “Friends stopped by your mother’s apartment this morning for their usual ‘Tuesday Tea at Ten’ gathering she hosts every week. Martha didn’t answer their knock. They called her apartment phone, got no answer. They called her cell phone, could hear it ring inside, but also got no answer. They assumed your mother had stepped out momentarily to get something and would be right back.

  “At 10:12 a.m., with growing concern, Mrs. Heather Jome—who states she’s one of your mother’s closest friends in the complex—called the staff desk.”r />
  He nodded, confirming the ladies’ friendship.

  “The manager for the Riverside Retirement Village, a lady named Theresa Herth, arrived and unlocked the apartment to conduct a wellness check on the resident. She found the apartment empty. Your mother’s purse is sitting on the chair inside the door, cell phone inside, keys missing. It appears she stepped out of her apartment, keys in hand, assuming she would be gone no more than a moment. After that—” she paused—“we don’t know.”

  And the son in him wanted to shudder at those words. He felt his muscles tighten, but only nodded.

  Sharon paused to drink more coffee before flipping open a folder. She held out a stack of photos. “Photos of your mother’s apartment. There are no obvious signs of a struggle or accident, a rug she might have tripped on, no smear of blood in the shower, nothing disorderly among things on a table, no noticeable items missing from the dresser or desk. The apartment is being printed so we can tell who’s been inside. But to me it looks like she had her keys in her hand, stepped out, and whatever’s occurred didn’t happen there.”

  He sorted slowly through the photos—the purse on a chair, pillows neat on the couch, mail on the counter, hairbrush on the bathroom sink, jewelry box still full. His heart twisted at all the familiar items from his mother’s life. Was this all he’d have left of her? He stopped the thought and wouldn’t allow himself to go any further down that road.

  Sharon was saying, “The women’s bridge group agrees that on Monday afternoon Martha was wearing a red dress with small white dots, black leather shoes, open-circle one-inch earrings, long black dress coat, patterned scarf, and black gloves. I didn’t find those items in the apartment.”

  That was useful information. John flipped rapidly through the photos again.

  “It’s possible Martha came home Monday and changed, that the dress is already at the dry cleaner,” Sharon offered. “Or she may still be wearing the dress. One possibility suggests she stepped out of her apartment Monday evening, the other that she stepped out early this morning. The fact she grabbed her coat and keys suggests she wasn’t just going down the hall.”

  He studied the photo of his mother’s bedroom. “She makes her bed as soon as she rises. She always has.”

  “That’s what her friends said. So . . . it could be this morning when she stepped out. I asked if she had a habit of walking over to the commons building to retrieve a newspaper, but the responses were mixed. I didn’t find the dress in her closet or a dry-cleaner pickup stub in her purse, which pushes me toward her leaving the apartment Monday evening.”

  “If that’s the case, she was gone twelve hours before someone noticed,” he said heavily, wishing he had someone to blame for that so he would have somewhere to put this pain. Blame himself. He hadn’t called to say good-night, which he sometimes did.

  Sharon reached over and lightly rested a hand on his arm, extending a small slice of comfort for that pain. “Keys in her hand, she pulls on her coat, leaves her purse and phone, steps out thinking she’d be gone just a moment. And something happened. Nobody noticed her absence until midmorning tea.”

  He knew his mom. She would have returned, been in touch somehow, if it were in her ability to do so. He took a deep breath and let it out. “Keep going,” he requested softly.

  “My read on the Village manager, Theresa Herth—thirties, competent, organized, well-liked. She doesn’t miss much among her staff or among those who live in the Village. Theresa doesn’t know of any romantic interests in your mother’s life—at least not within the Village community—or of any neighbor disputes, or even something where your mother was trying to mediate a concern among her friends. Affairs happen, there have been divorces in the complex, and a few residents don’t speak to one another. But it seems your mother was remarkably free and clear of any social drama going on.”

  “She’s more a live-and-let-live kind of lady,” John said. “Well, that’s not entirely true,” he added. “She loves to help when someone will let her.”

  Sharon nodded. “That could be useful. Her friends checked your mother’s phone for messages and calls, yet didn’t see anything useful. I’ve been through them and agree. Still, I’ve got an officer re-creating message and phone traffic as far back as we can go for a deeper assessment. You want the tick-tock or the overview?”

  “Give me the tick-tock.”

  “At 10:45 a.m. Theresa put out a ‘locate resident’ call to her staff. It sends a photo of your mom to every staff member, and they have assigned areas they are to visually check—the commons rooms, the bike path, the pool and garden, the parking lots. Staff weren’t able to locate Martha and saw no signs of anything amiss. They then started a phone chain, calling her friends, people in her building, looking for someone who had last seen her.

  “At 1:00 p.m. the staff began an official walk-through, working off blueprints, initialing where they checked. They called the hospitals in the area. Volunteers began to pass out her photo around the complex and at stores within walking distance of the Village.

  “At 4:00 p.m., six hours after they knew Martha was missing, Theresa called the cops. That six-hour time window is the agreed protocol between the police department and the Village.

  “We wouldn’t normally work a missing adult in the first forty-eight hours unless there’s evidence of suspicious circumstances. I don’t like what I see here, but I don’t have evidence that points to foul play. So officially we’re treating this case as an elderly missing medical. It lets me bring in uniforms before those forty-eight hours have passed.”

  “I appreciate that. Just out of curiosity, why the six-hour protocol?”

  “At under four hours we ‘locate’ too many seniors taking a nap. At eight hours we’ve probably lost whatever daylight is left, any eyewitnesses, and so forth. There aren’t enough cops to handle all the alerts, but six hours tends to put us on the cases we should be working. This one is a suspicious missing, even if we’re calling it something else. A cop’s mom is a unique case. Not simply that you are one of us,” she added, “but you’re high profile in law enforcement. We’ll get to that later.”

  “Having manpower on it early may be the difference.”

  “Let’s hope that proves true. What we’ve done since the call came in: we’re interviewing people, trying to fill in and tighten the timeline, and we’re doing a systematic sweep of the property. The Riverside Retirement Village is a complex of six apartment buildings and has—” she pulled a sheet of notes from her folder—“two hundred forty-two residents, fifty-one full- and part-time staff, a commons building, spacious gardens, bike path, enclosed pool, and miscellaneous support buildings. All this spread across forty-one acres. We’re not going to complete that sweep tonight. We’ve got fifty people working on the search—half are cops, half volunteers. I pulled in those from the community who have helped before, and I’ve got a number of cops on their own time since this is a cop’s mom. But it’s a lot of area to recheck.”

  “To do it right, it’s going to take time,” he agreed, already feeling that duration rest heavily on him.

  “We have uniforms knocking on doors and asking for permission to do visual checks inside apartments, focusing first on your mother’s building and the adjoining one. The residents are mostly mid-sixties to mid-eighties, and I’ve agreed to stop knocking on the oldest residents’ doors at 9:00 p.m., 10:00 p.m. for the younger ones. We’ll start again first thing in the morning.

  “We’re pulling security-camera footage—there’s surprisingly little of it within the complex, I’m sorry to say—from the Village and from businesses within the immediate area. We’ve locked down the place for outgoing traffic, and cops are checking any vehicles before they exit. Background checks on staff and those we can identify who have been on the property are under way.”

  “You’re really moving on this.”

  “I’m treating it like it’s my mother.”

  He appreciated the sentiment. “Her car?”

&n
bsp; “They moved from the apartment to the car for prints and photographs. I don’t have those yet. We need to know who was in your mother’s life, and the more prints, photos, phone calls and the like I can gather means that people we interview can’t lie to me.”

  She was taking the right steps. He just wished for a solid lead, that he could be out there doing something.

  “If we don’t have her located by morning, we’ll release her photo to the media in time for the 7:00 a.m. newscasts,” Sharon continued. “Police will handle the early-morning interviews, but if we don’t have solid info by noon, we’ll talk about you doing interviews to increase media coverage.”

  “Agreed.”

  She nodded ahead at the snarled traffic. “We’re about to arrive at the Village complex. Any questions at this point?”

  “I can stick with you?”

  She smiled. “I’m mostly accommodating. It’s not often I get to direct around a chief of police. I’ll employ you where I can.”

  “Thanks.”

  “If you need to go somewhere during the next forty-eight hours, Officer Jefferies here—or his partner—will be your driver. I want to be able to locate you quickly if necessary.”

  Jefferies cleared the front-gate security and parked. John started to get out when Sharon put her hand on his arm. “Give us a minute, Jefferies.”

  “Sure, Lieutenant.” The officer stepped out and closed the door.

  “You know the most logical answer to this, John. A cop’s mother has disappeared. I’m going to assume you’re willing to consider this a kidnapping for ransom, and you’re prepared to get a phone call.”

  He’d made that assumption before he boarded the flight out of Cheyenne. “My phone is being tapped, traced, and recorded. Anything to my private line back in Cheyenne, home or office, they’ll reroute to this cell. The phone in my mother’s apartment is now being monitored?”

  “Routed to me.”

  He sighed. “If that’s what this is about, I should have gotten that call by now.”

  “Or they’re waiting for your face to appear on screen.” She pushed open her door. “Command center first, then I walk you around—to her car, her apartment, and put you to work. You know her better than any of us. Maybe you’ll notice something we’ve missed.”