“We’re right behind you,” I promised. “We’ll make sure the place is spotless for you in the morning.”
“Bless you, dear,” she said, and she kissed my forehead.
When Nana Mama was out of earshot, Bree turned serious and said, “Alex, how long did you think you could be involved in the Gretchen Lindel investigation without me knowing?”
“The client story didn’t work?”
“Uh, no.”
I told her the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
When I was done, Bree was spitting mad.
“What were you thinking, going onto campus like that?” she demanded. “Entering a dorm room without a warrant? Threatening possible witnesses without authority and while on suspension due to pending homicide charges?”
I’d known most of that was coming, but it still hurt. I’d let her down.
“I wanted to be useful, Bree,” I said. “It felt like I was back in the game.”
“Your clients and practice are your game now. Have nothing to do? Work on your defense. Help Anita and Naomi make your case ironclad. And the next time you feel the need to lie or hide things from me, Alex? Please don’t.”
I had a hollow feeling in my stomach and said, “You’re right. I just … you’re right. It will never happen again.”
I hoped she’d forgive me. I hated going to sleep when one of us was mad at the other.
After several moments, Bree sighed and said, “So you don’t think those college boys are involved?”
My shoulders relaxed. I felt like we were getting back to level ground.
“Beyond the posts, no, not as far as I could tell.”
“You don’t think we should get a warrant for their computers?”
“And get them all expelled for being smart, nosy, teenage male nerds with blonde chips on their shoulders?”
“Well, when you put it like that,” Bree said, getting up and extending her hand to me.
I took it, kissed the back of her hand, and said, “Princess?”
She started laughing, said, “Charming?”
I got up, grinning. “That’s me.”
CHAPTER
16
JOHN SAMPSON HAD never heard a collective grief quite like this. The crying, wailing, and whimpering seemed to come from every room he passed.
Innocence destroyed, Sampson thought. Up until now, their lives have been one shooting star after another, and that’s gone.
Looking shell-shocked, Wally Christian, Georgetown University’s security chief, walked beside Sampson and Detective Ainsley Fox down a hall on the first floor of Village C West, a residential building for freshmen. A DCMP patrol officer stood aside so they could go through the double doors into the common area.
Sampson paused just beyond the doors and took in the carnage with one long, sweeping glance.
A young brunette in a Hoyas sweatshirt was sprawled on a couch, dead, a gunshot to her neck. A second young woman with short brown hair lay facedown and dead on the carpet. EMTs rushed out of the room with a gurney carrying a very large Samoan American male with two chest wounds.
“How many saw it?” Sampson asked.