She Lied She Died Carissa Lynch (best beach reads of all time TXT) đ
- Author: Carissa Lynch
Book online «She Lied She Died Carissa Lynch (best beach reads of all time TXT) đ». Author Carissa Lynch
Tentatively, I crept to it and peeked out, making sure the press was gone.
They were, and so were the girls. Nash was standing on my front porch, looking weary.
âMay I come in?â he asked, as I opened the door.
What choice do I have?
Sighing, I held the door open for him, eyes drifting down to the gun on his hip I hadnât noticed earlier. It wasnât strangeâseeing a cop with a gunâbut still⊠the sight of the weapon brought another surge⊠of what? Fear?
It felt like a symbol of violence to me, instead of a measure of protection. Nothing feels safe in this town anymore, not that it ever did.
I led him through the arched doorway of the living room and motioned for him to take a seat in the kitchen.
It was still early, barely 5am, but there was no going back to sleep now. I turned on my Keurig machine and popped a coffee pod inside.
âItâs one cup at a time. Sorry,â I said, sitting down across from him as the coffee maker gargled and hissed.
âI ran the press off. And the girls were picked up by their parents with no incident,â Nash assured me. He looked around the kitchen and I could see itâcuriosity.
âThey were trespassing. I did nothing wrong.â Images floated up of me running wildly through the woods, knocking down a child in the dark⊠I grimaced.
âYouâre right. They were in the wrong. And they had more to say when the parents showed. I was right. Just a prank. The school nurse will be happy to have her dummy returned. Those things are expensive.â
âHilarious prank.â I stood up and went to the coffee maker. I removed the cup and started another.
I didnât have any children of my ownâa decision I thought I might live to regret but never didâbut if I had⊠they might be around Amanda or Callyâs ages by nowâŠ
I sat the cup down in front of Nash, then offered him sugar and cream. He shook his head and blew steam off the top of the cup.
âWho are the parents? Anyone I know?â I asked.
âAmanda is Chuck and Adrianna Butlerâs daughter. Cally lives with her grandfather, Sal Newton. Know them?â
I groaned. âI donât know Sal. But Adrianna. Might that be Adrianna Montgomery, the columnist?â
But she was more than âthe columnistâ to me. Sheâd been my best friend, before she and her family decided to treat me and mine like lepers.
That line between friend and enemy stretched too thin between usâŠ
âYeah, the one and the only. I think she still uses her maiden name Montgomery in the papers.â
âShe sure does.â I sighed, adding sugars and creamer to my cup. Then I took a long, hot sip, burning my tongue. âWhat did they have to say about what their daughters were doing?â Part of me wondered if Adrianna had put Amanda up to it, but no⊠that was too low, even for her.
âHonestly, they were embarrassed. I donât think they even realized the girls had snuck out. And they were furious with Amanda for taking the other girl. Cally is a few years younger, but theyâre neighbors and friends, you seeâŠâ
âWho called the press?â
Nash shrugged. âMy guess is Amanda. Donât be surprised if your face pops up on Facebook after this. She told my dispatcher that you attacked them in the woods and she âhad proofâ. She might have been filming or Facebook living for all we knowâŠâ
I closed my eyes and sighed deeply. Iâd given up on social media years ago and I had no plan to get on there now, especially not with the recent news and ⊠now this.
âWhy is everyone so angry with me? And why not go throw eggs at Chrissyâs trailer or something? Why come here?â I wondered aloud.
âBecause this is where it happened. This is the scary place.â Nash did air quotes as he said âscary placeâ.
âMy family had nothing to do with Jennyâs death,â I said, bitterly.
âI know that. And my dad knew that too when he was alive. I was only five when it all happened, but I learned about it later⊠he talked about that case until his dying day.â
That surprised me. âHe did?â
Nash nodded.
âYou know sheâs saying sheâs innocent,â I said, quietly.
Nash abruptly chuckled into his cup. âAnd you know thatâs bull, right?â
I shrugged. âI mean, I donât believe everything she tells me, if thatâs what youâre saying⊠but itâs worth a listen, donât you think?â
I didnât tell him the truthâthat I suspected there was something more, something his dad might have missed.
Nashâs face hardened. âI donât think she deserves any sort of audience, to be honest with you. I mean, come on, why did she come back here? What was her reasoning? Have you bothered asking her that?â
My face warmed. âI have but I canât discuss our interviews right now. Weâve only met twice, so weâre just getting started.â
âYou should talk to Katie,â Nash said.
âKatie?â But I already knew who he meant. Katrina Juliott, Jennyâs mother.
âShe still live around here?â I asked, hesitantly. I thought about her son, Jennyâs brother Mike, that Iâd seen at the vigil the other night.
When Nash nodded, I asked, âWhy in the world would Katie Juliott talk to me?â
Nash set his cup down slowly and ran his fingers through his shaggy hair. âBecause, like you, she always wanted more. She had doubts about Chrissyâs guilt, too.â
Chapter Thirteen
There is more than one way to kill a person. Not all of those ways involve death.
Katie Juliott wasnât dead and buried like her daughter Jenny. Nevertheless, she was still gone. The lights are on but no oneâs home.
There was something vacant in the old womanâs eyes as she led me inside her house. She didnât act surprised when I showed up on her doorstep. She didnât ask who I was.
I hadnât seen her in years and years⊠how could she possibly know who I am?
She was wispy and thin. The full rosy cheeks I remembered from my childhood, that aristocratic nose
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