“Not a chance, Deputy.” He glanced at her, his eyes darker than usual. “If I let you take a taxi and you tripped in the dark and loosened a couple of stitches, I’d be in big trouble.”
She stopped abruptly. “Who put you up to this? Gus? Did he call and tell you I was on the way?”
“I called him.”
“Why?”
“To check on you.”
Her mouth snapped shut, and she resumed walking, telling herself not to expend any energy trying to figure out Special Agent Rook. “Maybe that was your cover story with Gus, but you have an agenda that has nothing to do with my health and well-being.”
With his free hand, Rook dug his car keys out of his jacket pocket. “Were you this cynical when you were a college professor?”
“Instructor. I was never a professor. And I’m not cynical. I’m realistic.”
When they reached his car, Mackenzie was out of breath, which irritated her. But four days of a downsized workout or none at all had taken its toll. She’d get up early and do some kind of exercise before she went into work, stitches or no stitches.
Rook tossed her pack onto the backseat of his car. “If it’s any consolation, Gus didn’t suggest I pick you up. He said if I did, I should treat you right.”
“He raised two nieces – he has a good eye for men like you.”
“Men like me? Carine’s married to a pararescueman. Antonia’s married to a U.S. senator and former rescue helicopter pilot.”
Mackenzie frowned at him. “You’ve done your research. Do you know Antonia? She lives in Washington.”
“I think she might have checked me out for a concussion once.”
Mackenzie wasn’t sure what to believe. Antonia, the middle Winter sibling, was an emergency room physician. She and her husband, Hank Callahan, the junior senator from Massachusetts, had invited Mackenzie to their house in Georgetown twice since her arrival in Washington. Had Rook checked out all the Winters because of his investigation? Because of the attack? Because of her?
“I’m in good company, if you ask me,” Rook added. “And Nate’s a decent guy -”
“Thanks to Gus, or so he’d say.”
“You stayed at his house after I left?”
She nodded. “Just at night. It was easier than having him on my case or, worse, insisting on staying up at Beanie’s with me. He’s a fabulous cook. That helped.”
“They treat you like one of the family.”
“But I’m not,” she said, stepping past him to the passenger door. “I have both my parents.”
Rook pulled open the door for her. “You were a hellion as a kid, pretty much on your own after your father was hurt. Your sense of humor and red hair and cute freckles must have kept you from getting throttled on a regular basis.”
She hustled in front of him and got in the car. “You have been talking to Gus.” She looked up at Rook, who might have been grinning, but it was difficult to tell in the dark. “Were you questioning him as part of your investigation?”
Without answering, Rook shut the door and walked around to the other side of the car.
When he got behind the wheel, Mackenzie, eyes focused straight ahead, said, “I have one stop to make.”
“Mac -”
“Bernadette summoned me to see her. She’s not someone easily put off. It’s up to you whether or not you want to drive me there.”
She thought she saw the muscles in his forearm tense as he stuck the key in the ignition. “It’s not a problem.”
“She lives off Embassy Row.”
“I know where she lives.”
Mackenzie sank back into the comfortable seat. “Of course you do.”
Bernadette Peacham’s elegant 1920s house on a quiet street off Massachusetts Avenue always made Mackenzie think of garden parties with its ivy-covered brick and lush landscaping. Rook parked under a massive oak, and when she climbed out of the car, the humidity almost took her breath away. The night air and massive shade trees hadn’t cut the stifling heat.
An outside light came on as she and Rook took the moss-lined brick sidewalk to the side entrance. Bernadette, still in a wrinkled, gray suit she’d obviously worn to the courthouse, opened the door and gave Mackenzie a sweeping, critical once-over. “You don’t look as bad as I expected. A little pale. I’m so relieved this lunatic didn’t stab you to death.”
“Me, too,” Mackenzie said, then motioned behind her. “Beanie, I’d like you to meet -”
“Special Agent Rook.” She stood to one side and smiled coolly, eyeing him. “Am I right?”
“A pleasure to meet you, Judge Peacham,” he said, his tone neutral.
“Yes. Well, come inside.”
She led them past the kitchen and down the hall to the family room. Her Washington house was the polar opposite of her simple lake house in New Hampshire, and if Mackenzie hadn’t known better, she’d have thought this was the wrong Bernadette Peacham. Expensive antiques from various periods mixed with traditional fabrics and colors, and artwork from her travels all over the world. Cal had taken his favorite pieces from Peru and Japan, but most were from Bernadette’s life before their brief marriage.
“I can’t wait to be out of here,” she said. “It’s so damn hot!”
Mackenzie remained on her feet. She didn’t plan to stay long. “I don’t blame you. When do you head for New Hampshire?”
“Friday. I know it gets hot there, but not like this. And if it’s hot, I have the lake right outside my door.”
“Are you worried about being there -”
“With this lunatic on the loose? No, of course not. He’ll be long gone by then, or in custody, one would hope. I’ve never worried one second when I’ve been at the lake on my own, and I don’t intend to start now. You needn’t fret. Gus will check in on me, no doubt. He’s like a mother hen sometimes.”
Of all the images that came to mind when Mackenzie thought about Gus Winter, a mother hen wasn’t among them. Not even close. “I left some food in the refrigerator. Nothing that would spoil before you get there. There’s a half bag of marshmallows in the bread box -”
“Marshmallows? Mackenzie, you know they’ll attract ants.”
“I wrapped a rubber band around the bag. It’s so tight an ant can’t possibly get in.”
Bernadette waved a hand, dismissing the subject of marshmallows and ants. “You’re the one who was attacked. We should all be worrying about you.” She softened slightly, sinking into a wingback chair. “How are you? I heard you were lucky the knife didn’t penetrate deeply.”
“It’s a superficial wound. Painful, but it’ll heal. Every day’s better.”
“I’m sure it wasn’t just luck that you weren’t hurt worse. You’ve always been a good fighter.”
Mackenzie was aware of Rook lingering in the doorway, but he didn’t seem eager to jump into the conversation. “I had him, Beanie,” she said, “but I couldn’t hold him.”
“You’d been stabbed. Even more experienced officers have faltered in similar situations.” Bernadette’s tone was matter-of-fact more than reassuring. “Give yourself time to heal. Don’t push yourself, or you’ll end up delaying your recovery.”
“That’s why I didn’t head back here until tonight.”
“Good. Now, this man – you recognized him?”
“He seemed vaguely familiar.”
“Vaguely? That’s not the kind of thing one wants to hear in a courtroom.”
The state police detectives, FBI agents and deputy marshals investigating the two attacks in New Hampshire hadn’t wanted to hear it, either. They wanted specifics, and Mackenzie couldn’t provide them. The eyes, she’d said. They’d solidified the sense that she’d seen him before. She hadn’t been very helpful – and she was convinced they’d all downplayed, if not totally disregarded, her statement because of her knife wound and initial round of pain medication.
“Would you recognize him if you saw him again?” Bernadette asked.
“I’d know it was the same man. I’m not sure it’d help me figure out where I’ve seen him before.”
Mackenzie didn’t flinch as Bernadette studied her with a frankness that anyone who knew the exacting judge got used to. Bernadette was blunt and straightforward, but also unfailingly generous, intelligent and fair-minded. Finally, she sighed, shaking her head. “I’m sorry. I wish this attack hadn’t happened. I wish I could at least help find the perpetrator. I’ve seen enough lowlifes come through my courtroom. But I’m clueless. I’m not good with sketches. I don’t think I’d recognize myself in one.”