Chapter Twenty
Detective
Scheffield woke up with one thought in mind; getting that last DNA swab
collected and seeing Paul Federici off on his drive to Raleigh to deliver the
samples in person. That was the only way the testing could get done in time for
the trial of Chris Devereaux; which was about to begin. This particular
evidence was really the only piece that could possibly sway the jury enough to
get a conviction. Without it, there was absolutely no hope. This last test had
to tell them something or they were sunk.
The only
person left on the detective’s list was Jesse Durant. He had been unsuccessful
in tracking him down the day before; upset because this threw the testing off
by one day; one very important day; as there were not many left before the
trial started. He wasn’t sure if Jesse had been avoiding him intentionally or
had simply been busy the previous day, but he intended to find him this morning.
It was the first – and most pressing – task he needed to complete for the day.
The entire case hinged on this evidence and he was not going to screw it up.
This was also his chance to prove himself as a capable detective and he didn’t
want to make any mistakes. He knew he was a good detective and he was going to
prove it by somehow pulling the needle of truth out of the proverbial haystack.
He drank his
coffee early, picked up Paul Federici, and headed directly over to Devereaux
Downs; knowing this was almost definitely the place he would find the man for
whom he was searching. Having done his homework, the detective knew Jesse’s
basic work schedule. The man certainly was a creature of habit; he had
discovered in his search. He left for work the same time every day, he ate
lunch the same time every day, and he headed home to Grace the same time every
day. He was dependable and consistent; not really bad qualities to find in a
man, but everything is subjective and that consistency is not always a good
character trait if used for the wrong purpose. It is all to what one decides to
apply one’s particular gift and sometimes good qualities are used for bad
purposes, thought the detective as he drove.
Pulling into
the long, gravel driveway leading up to the tattered old farmhouse, he saw
instantly that his decision to catch Jesse Durant before he left for work had
been a good one; seeing his car parked beside Grace’s beat up, old Lincoln; a
car that she was not willing to part with any time soon; it having been through
mile after mile of her crazy life with her. For the most part, she was still
having a bit of difficulty letting go of the past; having only recently begun
receiving some of the answers to questions she had been asking most of her
life. The aged vehicle, The Dream Machine, was simply a link to the past; a
bridge she wasn’t quite sure if she should burn yet. It was not just a car. Not
to Grace.
Detective
Scheffield and Paul Federici, who had joined him to do the swab on Jesse and
get directly on the road to Raleigh, pulled in quietly; the detective parking
his unmarked police car directly behind Jesse’s; not in an attempt to block him
from leaving, but, if he were watching, just to send the message that they
weren’t leaving until they got that for which they had come. The detective walked
up the steps to the front porch, Paul Federici right behind him, and knocked on
the red door with its peeling paint unassumingly; both men waiting impatiently
for someone to answer. Jesse himself was the one who came to see who was
knocking on the door so early in the morning; smiling at the detective when he
recognized who his guests were; yet the detective couldn’t help but notice the
look his eyes possessed for only a micro-second before he feigned a smile – or
so the detective believed – and the look was not one of pleasure. It was more a
look of annoyance; the detective seeing an arrogant air about the man that he
hadn’t noticed before. Still, Jesse invited the two men in without hesitation;
even calling for Grace to come and say hello; to be polite and accommodating to
their early morning visitors. He was more of the mind that he wanted her ring
shown off a bit; making sure the detective knew that she was no longer on the
market and he should steer clear of her. At least that is the feeling he got;
the vibe that existed in the living room, where they had all collected –
including Adrienne; who was still asleep on the sofa with Casey when the detective
had knocked on the door; this of course waking the sleek, black dog from her
slumber; the sweet dog simply wagging her nub of tail as fast as she could;
excited to receive any visitors at all.
Jesse
submitted to the test without argument; without question also, though the visit
was an early one and not what he had expected on a weekday morning. After all,
he was a planner; wanting to leave as little to chance as he possibly could;
especially where Grace was concerned. To her his behavior seemed normal for the
most part and any doubts she may have had about him subsided when she saw how
readily he agreed to the DNA test. She had missed the initial exchange between
the men, though; having not seen the look in her fiance’s eyes when he found
Detective Scheffield knocking on the door before breakfast. It was possible he
was simply a little insecure when it came to Grace and their new relationship.
Perhaps he was just a man in love who wanted his feelings to finally be reciprocated,
thought the detective; a man who didn’t want to lose in the game of love –
again. One couldn’t blame him for that really, he mused; thinking that he would
probably be acting the same way if he had been the one to propose to such a
beautiful and decent woman. He would not want to lose Grace, either. He still
wanted her desperately; unable to put his feelings aside as he should do in
this instance. He still hoped for a chance. He couldn’t help it. He believed in
the feelings he experienced when he almost kissed her; knowing it was more than
lust for her that he possessed.
Detective
Sheffield and Paul Federici kept the visit brief due to the early hour and
their time crunch; Paul swabbing the inside of Jesse’s cheek and the two then politely
excusing themselves; apologizing again for the unannounced visit. Both men had
the same thing on their minds and that was to get those swabs to Raleigh as
quickly as they could; both pondering what the results would tell them – if anything.
It would be a huge disappointment to the detective for the results to come back
the same as the results of the hair samples that had been tested earlier; which
had told them nothing at all except that their suspect was not anyone whose
hair was tested and that he or she definitely was not a career criminal because
his – or her – DNA was nowhere to be found in the database. Then there was
still the question of who he had missed the first time around as a suspect. He
had thought about it until his head ached, but he had again come up empty; not
being able to think of anyone else who had a reason to commit this crime.
Genevieve and Adrienne had no real enemies as far as he could tell and nobody
would have benefitted from their deaths but family. The fact that he had to
resort to simply asking everyone anywhere close to Devereaux Downs for a sample
of their DNA still bothered him immensely. He wasn’t a big fan of loose ends;
preferring his ends tied tightly into knots so nothing and no one could escape.
Jesse and
the two women in his life had a light breakfast of cereal and fruit; him
heading off to work as soon as he was finished eating; giving Grace but a peck
on the lips before he left. This kiss was nothing like the others she had
received from her new fiancé and she took notice of this right away, but again
quickly brushed to the side the idea that something was amiss in their budding
relationship. Maybe the early morning visit from the detective and his cohort
for this project had put him in a bad mood, though she couldn’t imagine why
that would matter to him one way or the other. In fact, she mused, he should be
glad to help in any way pertaining to the case against her uncle. Perhaps he
was simply a bit nervous around her now; things having changed so drastically
between them with her acceptance of the glittering diamond that now encircled
her slender finger. She felt different somehow than she had twenty four hours
ago when the relationship between her and her best friend was just blossoming
into something different, something deeper than mere friendship. Marriage was
another subject; one that she had no intentions of ever committing to two weeks
ago when she left her other fiancé, Michael Stranahan. The fact that he was now
deceased because he had been so obsessed with her still rattled her, as it
would anyone, but she didn’t let anyone know; not even her cousin. She
discerned that Adrienne had enough to worry about under the current
circumstances; considering that her father now sat in the county jail accused
of trying to execute her while she slept.
Grace wasn’t
really sure how her cousin felt about this, either, because she wasn’t talking
about it. As a matter of fact, she hadn’t mentioned it once. That bothered her
a bit, but she let it go for the moment; not wanting to push her cousin too
hard as she recovered from her wounds – physically and emotionally. Though Adrienne
was acting strangely this morning,
she thought; her simply staring with an odd expression on her face as the DNA sample
was collected from Jesse; seeming to be anywhere but in that living room with
the rest of them. To Grace, she almost looked as if she were trying to make
sense of something in her mind; sort out all the thoughts she had been having
about how she arrived at this juncture; lying on a sofa recuperating from a
gunshot wound to the head. She wasn’t confiding anything in her cousin, either.
Whatever thoughts she was having, she was keeping them to herself for the time
being…and that simply wasn’t the behavior Grace was accustomed to seeing in
her. Normally she was impossible to shut up and now – she only half-smiled at
her cousin and pretended to follow a conversation, though she could tell there
was something brewing in Adrienne’s mind and she desperately wanted to find out
what that was.
The entire
day was an odd one for Grace. She felt that she should be excited and wishing
to show off the impressive diamond ring she had newly acquired, but she felt
like doing anything but that. She had imagined her wedding day her whole life
and wondered what man would be standing beside her as they exchanged vows at
the altar of a beautiful church. Now she knew who she would marry and could
plan whatever sort of wedding she wanted, but she wasn’t as enthusiastic as she
had imagined she would be when the time finally came. If she were honest with
herself, she would have to admit that she never truly loved Michael Stranahan;
even before she was aware of his dark side. She was only trying to fit into the
mold she thought should be her life; to settle down and make an honest woman of
herself like she felt she was supposed to do to please her family, despite the
fact that she had precious little family left to please. Jesse’s proposal had
thrown her a little off balance; her not expecting it at all really; much less
so soon after her new relationship with him had begun. None of it had had time
to sink in yet, but when it did, she would find herself feeling different about
the whole situation than she had imagined when he proposed. Vastly different.
Paul
Federici was well on his way to Raleigh to deliver the DNA swabs in person. In
fact, he should probably be arriving any time now, thought the detective as he
looked at his watch; it being but a few hour’s drive by car. Detective
Scheffield found himself pacing back and forth and circling his desk; his
nerves a bit frazzled because he was almost out of time before the trial began
and the results from the samples riding with Paul to Raleigh were needed as
soon as possible. He practically considered taking off to the capital city with
his best forensic technician so he could do whatever he could to speed up the
process, but changed his mind at the last minute; wishing to take another look
at the case file; just to make sure he hadn’t overlooked someone or something.
Part of his
anxiety stemmed from the fact that he was positive this was not the trial that
was going to put Chris Devereaux away for a long time, though he had been wrong
before. He wondered what the holdup was with his superior, Brady Peterson, in
charging the man with the murder of his sister, Vivienne Devereaux that took
place ten years ago. The best thing that could happen, honestly, was for him to
plead guilty to the crime instead of putting his poor daughter through the
stress of having to come to court as a witness – an eye-witness – and sit
across the room from him as she had to spill all of the horrid and difficult,
to say and to hear, details of the crime. The detective wondered if they could
get away with charging him with pre-meditated first degree murder or if they
were going to have to take their chances with second degree murder as the official
charge. The sentence he would receive for that was enough to put him away for
most of his natural life, though a charge of second degree murder would leave
him eligible for parole at some point. Honestly, with the overcrowding problem
in the prison system, he would most likely do about one quarter of his sentence
– if that. Oh well, thought the detective, if that was the best that could be
done they would simply have to learn to live with whatever the end result would
be for the extremely guilty man. His head finally came out of the clouds as he
heard the telephone on his desk beep; letting him know that someone in the
bullpen wished to speak with him. He picked up and, to his happy surprise, the
voice on the other end of the line was that of Brady Peterson. He pressed the
button to talk back; hoping he was calling about charging Chris Devereaux with
his sister’s early demise.
“Brady, how
are you? What’s up?” he said into the ancient intercom; a feature that should
have been updated years ago, but one that the department had no funding to
improve; this problem or any others, either.
“Hey, Matt.
I’m good. How about you?” he asked in return.
“Frustrated
with the current case a little, boss.” Detective Scheffield answered honestly.
“Paul Federici is well on his way to Raleigh with the new DNA samples. I think
that may be the only way to convince the jury that Devereaux is guilty. Hell,
maybe he did do it. It feels like we’re missing someone or something on this
one though, Brady. I just can’t put my finger on it, but it’s there.”
“The bastard
killed his sister, though. That much we do know for sure – unless his daughter
is lying, which I doubt.” replied Brady. “I did some research on Chris
Devereaux and he hasn’t exactly been a boy scout. There have been numerous
complaints about his behavior over the years; him engaging in some bar fights
and property battles - things of that nature. Oddly, nothing ever came of any
charges he acquired, though. Each time he was arrested, he was bailed out the
next morning – if not released the same night on his own recognizance – and no
court date was ever set for him. The only way things could have occurred the
way they apparently did was for him to have friends in higher places than he
was – which unfortunately we’ll never know unless he spills it…and I don’t see
that kind of cooperation coming from that man.” he explained to his top homicide
detective.
“Well, what
do you want me to do about the murder charge for his sister?” he inquired of
Brady.
“Go ahead and
charge him. I thought maybe we should wait until he walked out of the
courthouse a free man - exonerated of killing his mother and attempting to kill
his daughter - and nab him as he started to walk away with a smile; thinking he
got us. I can see the look on his face now. That’s the picture that keeps
popping into my head.” he told the detective. “But I don’t want to wait that
long. I know he’s unable to bail himself out this time and frankly, I don’t
want to give that wicked man a chance to hurt anyone else, especially his
daughter if he had some kind of plan to finish what he started. I don’t want
him to get out of jail at all. Not for anything but his trial. I want him to
rot in his cell through the end of this trial, thinking he may get out, and
then burst the shit out of his bubble. Though I have to say that unjustified
high opinion he seemed to have of himself appears to be waning fast.” Brady
rattled off; barely taking a breath between sentences, but chuckling a bit as
he spoke the last one.
“You got it,
Boss.” replied Detective Scheffield; trying to contain his pleasure about his
assignment, though he wasn’t sure why he felt the need to do so. “I’m on it.
Going over to the jail right now.”
“Okay. Let
me know how it goes.” his boss requested of him.
“Will do.”
he responded.
Having
finally received the order for which he had been waiting, he wasted no time in
walking over to the jail and having one of the guards escort Chris Devereaux to
an interrogation room. The detective thought the man would have to realize that
the visit for which he was being dragged into another tiny, windowless, and
stark room could not possibly be a pleasant one. Chris was fairly certain he
was not receiving a visit from a family member and he had no friends of whom to
speak. The detective decided to have him handcuffed to the bar along the edge
of the metal table and let him stew in the room alone for several minutes
before he entered to inform him that he had no hopes of ever walking out of there
a free man. Perhaps his ferocity about sealing Chris’s fate had more to do with
the fact that the detective was falling in love with his niece, Grace, and
wanted retribution – all within legal limits – for what the cruel and heartless
man had taken from her. Now he was about to exact that revenge and it made him
feel much satisfaction.
After
letting Chris sit for fifteen minutes, wondering who he was going to see walk
through that door, Detective Scheffield opened the door and strolled in
casually; a knowing smile spreading across his handsome face. He wanted to
start off by making his suspect feel at ease so it would hit him that much
harder when he delivered the news and read him his rights once more. This was
certainly out of character for him; having always been a fair and decent person
– one who never enjoyed watching someone else suffer. This time it was
different, however. This time it was personal and he had to concentrate
intently not to allow his emotions to cloud his typically rational judgement, though
it took every ounce of restraint he could muster to continue this tradition
where Chris Devereaux was concerned.
He walked
calmly over to the table and plopped down on the metal stool across from the
prisoner and asked with a satisfied smirk on his face, “Do you know why you’re
here, Mr. Devereaux?”
“How the
hell would I know?” he muttered sarcastically.
“Well, I’ll
get right down to it then.” began Detective Scheffield calmly; ignoring the
nasty answer he had just received altogether, “Christopher Devereaux, you’re
under arrest for the homicide of your sister, Vivienne Devereaux. You have the
right to remain silent. Anything you say or do can and will be used against you
in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an
attorney, one will be appointed to you. Do you understand these rights as they
have been read to you?” he rattled off as he had a hundred times before, though
this time it brought him great satisfaction.
“Oh God.”
Chris said quietly as he bowed his head and covered his face with his hands;
realizing now that his niece, Grace, had been telling the truth during the last
and only visit that he would receive from her. Her threats had not been empty
ones.This quelled any hope he may have had that she had only been trying to
scare him. At this point, there was nothing more he could do about the
situation. He was not getting out of jail – except to go to his funeral, he
mused. His fate had been decided. He was well aware that his daughter had seen
the entire, deplorable crime that he had committed against her aunt and had
probably been convinced that he was the one who had tried to kill her, too. And
there was not a thing he could do about trying to convince her that wasn’t
true.
“Anything
you’d like to say before being returned to your luxurious accommodations?”
inquired the detective; unable to control the delight he felt about putting
this particular man away for plausibly longer than his natural life. Even if
the man managed to live long enough to see the outside world again, he would be
too old to do any more harm to anyone; except perhaps himself.
“Yeah. Fuck
you.” he hissed through clenched teeth; his hopelessness momentarily replaced
with anger toward Detective Scheffield for displaying pleasure during his curt
speech.
“Okay then.
Back to your cage, animal.” retorted the detective; doing his very best not to
crack a smile right then.
The guard
waiting outside the interrogation room was not unhappy about escorting him back
to his cell, either, though he didn’t say a word, but merely smiled the entire
time; a knowing smile. The corrections officer was one of the people in Aurora
who detested Chris Devereaux as much as every single member of the jury for his
trial did…and he wasn’t afraid to let him know. He had told him to thank God
that he wasn’t a juror because he would do whatever he had to do to ensure the
man never saw the free world again. And he meant it. This guard was one of many
who had been making his stay as uncomfortable as possible; going so far as to
wait twenty four hours to bring him a roll of toilet paper. They were small
inconveniences to a free person, but for Chris they were all things beyond his
control; making them not so small to him. His entire life had been about
control…and now he had none.
Grace had
been at home with Adrienne the whole day and the two had barely spoken. Her
cousin appeared to be healing physically at a rapid pace, but emotionally she
didn’t seem like herself. If she were understandably upset about the fact that
her own father was probably the person who tried to snuff out her short life,
Grace was certain she would have been confiding in her regarding this. No, it
was something other than that which was bothering her and she could feel it.
She was only unsure what to do about it. This was one of the many times since
her death that she wished desperately that she could speak with her
grandmother; the one woman who had always seemed to have all the answers – no
matter what the questions. Grace knew she could never in a million years
compete with Genevieve and her endless knowledge about every subject
imaginable. She was the one asking for advice – the same as Adrienne – and she
hadn’t the slightest idea how to fill her Gram’s shoes and help her cousin. It
simply wasn’t possible.
She left her
cousin alone with her thoughts as she did her best to sort out their meanings;
heading to the kitchen to see what she could scare up for dinner. Also on her
mind was the fact that she had not received one phone call from her fiancé all
day…and this was extremely out of character for Jesse, who normally checked in
every two hours on the average. Grace was temporarily blinded by love, so she
didn’t give one thought to analyzing this new dilemma. It was impossible for
her to see the constant phone calls as a mechanism of control being exercised
by him. Her normal attitude about such things was that the things one finds
endearing in the beginning are the things that feel oppressive to one in the
end. If she thought about it, she would have to admit that there were definite
signs that their relationship was headed toward one in which there would be a
controlling, insecure husband and a submissive, obedient wife; a relationship
she had been through several times over already, minus the marriage, and had no
desire of living through even once more. But she didn’t see it yet. Right now she
was but a bliss filled woman in love…with the entirely wrong man for her.
Jesse
arrived home late that night; the two women sitting in front of the television
eating their dinner; having waited as long as their stomachs could bear. He
hadn’t even called to say he would be late – and his fiancée was rightfully
perturbed about that. He was displaying characteristics she had never known him
to display in his entire life; treating her so very differently than he had
before he proposed to her – differently than he ever had since she had known
him; their meeting occurring before either was old enough to remember its
happening. Perhaps these were some of the thoughts plaguing Adrienne and she
didn’t want to be the one to break her cousin’s heart by telling her what she
saw unfolding. That certainly made sense; more sense than the nothing Grace had
been able to decipher.
One thing
that she did notice after Jesse got his plate from the oven, where Grace had
left it to keep it warm, and joined them in the living room, was that Adrienne
stared at him as much as she could get away with and have the attention still
go unnoticed – or so she thought; simply staring with a quizzical expression on
her face. Her cousin did not yet know Adrienne’s feelings about Jesse’s recent
treatment of her, so Grace imagined that could be the reason for her cousin’s
blank stares at the only other person in the room with the two women. Her
cousin had always been one to speak her mind, no matter who was displeased
about it, so she couldn’t understand why Adrienne was holding back her opinions
about Jesse or her advice to Grace…if that is what was swirling around in her
mind.
Grace was
also stumped as to why things between Jesse and her seemed to be changing so
rapidly. Even she knew that he was the kind of person who stuck to a strict
schedule whenever possible and his not adhering to his normal one tonight was a
change she considered significant enough to bring up in conversation; of course
doing this later, when they were alone in bed that night. She didn’t want any
secrets between them and because of this she decided that she also had to tell
him about the moment that had almost happened between Detective Scheffield and
her. It wasn’t fair to ask him to open up to her and be honest if she weren’t
willing to do the same herself, she reasoned. She wasn’t totally certain why
she felt it was so important to let him know that another man had tried to kiss
her; even though she had resisted his advance. It was simply something she felt
she must do to start their relationship off on the right foot.
Needless to
say, Jesse did not take the news of the kiss that almost happened very well;
Grace feeling immediately the coldness that came with his stare as he listened
to her relay the entire story; one that she desperately wished was a short
story that wouldn’t go beyond the four walls in which it was expressed. After noticing
even further change in her fiancé as she spoke, she wasn’t sure the whole thing
was going to end there. In retrospect, perhaps telling him about the incident
was not a good idea, she mused. The admission had not brought the two closer as
she had hoped it would, but driven them even farther apart; adding brick after
brick to the wall he had created around himself; not building it big enough for
two, but sealing only himself off from the world around him.
It was the
first night they had not made love before falling asleep and she didn’t like
the implications of that, though it seemed there was little she could do about
it. The harder she tried to accept her new role as his life partner, the more
his demeanor changed – and she was not fond of the new behaviors Jesse was
displaying. She had never considered him an insecure man and by all rights he
should not have been one; the attention he received from women everywhere he
went being enough to swell anyone’s head, however, appearing to have the
reverse effect on him; turning him instead into a man who lacked the confidence
to have a true and honest relationship with any woman because along with insecurity
comes distrust, even though the dubiety was generally unwarranted.
Grace did
the only thing she could do after Jesse turned his back to her in the bed and
that was to push the thoughts out of her mind for the time being and go to
sleep. It was not easy, but eventually she drifted off to dreamland; this night
again receiving a visit from her grandmother, though she was too distracted
even in her sleep to begin to understand what it was Genevieve was trying to
tell her this time. She had no way of knowing that, at the same time she was
dreaming of her Gram, Adrienne was fast asleep downstairs having a dream that
was nearly identical to the one Grace was having upstairs; only her cousin was
paying much more attention to the message contained in the dream than she was. In
fact, it would end up being the warning that finally changed both of their
lives…to the lives that they were meant to be living and the happiness that
Genevieve knew they both deserved…not to mention closure where her death was
concerned. And it would be the last time she would reveal herself to her
granddaughters before crossing over to the other side for good.
The next
morning, Jesse left for work before Grace even opened her eyes; this sending a
small wave of panic through her when she finally did awaken; wondering if her
honesty the night before had altered her relationship with her fiancé too much
to return to the bliss that both had truly felt only days ago. She felt as if
she were on auto-pilot the entire day; going about her daily routine with
practically no thoughts at all; her brain’s way of protecting her from having
to feel any more emotional pain, as she had already had more than her fair
share of this. Adrienne was even more distant this day than she had been; again
looking to her cousin like she was also making an attempt to sort out all of
the thoughts plaguing her – and not appearing to be having any more luck than
she had been having. Though she desperately wished Adrienne would confide in
her about her thoughts and feelings, she didn’t want to push her too far too
fast. What Grace had been through in the past two weeks paled in comparison to
dealing with being shot in the head; having to know that someone out there
wanted her dead…and that someone could have possibly been her own father.
It was an
extremely quiet day at Devereaux Downs; as quiet a day as Detective Scheffield
was having; biting his fingernails waiting for the results of the DNA tests.
There was nothing more he could do at this point but wait. Grace and Adrienne
barely spoke the entire day and the conversation didn’t improve much when Jesse
finally made his appearance at dinner; again arriving late and again without
making a phone call to say so. Nobody spoke that night at dinner at all really;
just odd stares at Jesse from Adrienne just like the previous night’s meal. She
didn’t even seem to care who noticed her gaze, either. Grace could see the
wheels turning in her cousin’s mind, but was left to guess as to what the
meaning was behind this odd behavior. Whatever it was she was debating about
with herself, her cousin wished she would simply tell her; allow her to help if
she could.
This didn’t
happen, though, and everyone called it an early night; turning in before the
clock struck 9:00pm. Jesse barely acknowledged that Grace was in the same bed
as he; again turning his back to her so she couldn’t see that he, too, was wide
awake and contemplating how to tear down the wall that he himself had built
around him; his thoughts not much different from the thoughts his fiancé was
having at the same time, though his resolution to the issue was markedly
different than the ideas of his fiancée. Neither of them were aware of it, but
Adrienne laid on the living room sofa as awake and alert as her cousin and
Jesse were upstairs, though her ideations were somewhat different than Grace’s.
The ruminations of Adrienne were not, however, so different from those of
Jesse. She had a decision to make and it was one that had the potential to
crush Grace if brought to light. Sadly, though, it seemed as if her mind was
already made up about this. There was simply no way she could allow this
information to fall through the cracks. The subject was too important to go
left undisclosed.
The next
morning, Detective Scheffield received the call he had been anxiously awaiting;
Paul Federici letting him know that he was currently on his way back from
Raleigh with the DNA results; the piece of evidence that would make or break
the case against Chris Devereaux for the shooting of Genevieve and Adrienne
Devereaux. The words he heard come out of Paul’s mouth were certainly not the
ones he was expecting to hear. The killer was
one of the suspects they had looked at carefully, though clearly not carefully
enough or his actions would not have gone unnoticed for as long as they had. In
fact, this particular suspect really made no attempt to hide anything he did
before or after the shootings, though Detective Scheffield didn’t catch onto
any of that. The information he received, however, was the last piece in an
extremely tricky puzzle that finally made sense to him now. Knowing what he now
knew, he understood how this criminal could have slipped through his fingers; how
his judgement could have been so clouded. He now understood why he had been
wrong about this one.
Detective
Scheffield’s description alone of the situation and the test results were
enough to get a search warrant for the suspect’s home; a house he knew for
certain was empty at this time. He expected to find some evidence of how or why
the crime was committed, but what he and the other officers found was beyond
anything he could have imagined. This crime was no spur of the moment idea,
either. Apparently, this plan had been in the works for years and no one had
ever been the wiser. After this new discovery – a treasure trove of damning
evidence – the detective was finally able to make sense of it…all of it.