Page 25 of Murder List (Buchanan-Renard 4)
âHeâs had a thing for her for years,â she explained. âShouldnât we sit down?â She motioned to a waiter, who immediately hurried over. âWould you please remove these three place settings? Thank you,â she said as he began to gather up the silverware and the wineglasses. Sophie leaned around him to see Regan. âCordie can sit next to Alec on his right, and you can sit on his left.â
âShe is bossy,â Alec said.
Regan nodded. She was smiling until Sophie said, âCordieâs right. You really should take off the blanket. It hides your beautiful dress.â
âIt isnât a blanket. Itâs a wrap.â
âNo need to sound so defensive.â
âIâm not being defensive,â she argued in a voice even she knew sounded extremely defensive. âIâm simply telling you itâs a wrap.â
âOkay,â Sophie said, and it was obvious that she was now trying to placate Regan. âAnd Iâm simply suggesting to you that itâs time to unwrap the wrap. Speaking of dresses, do you like mine?â
âVery much. Is it new?â Reganâs tone was laced with suspicion.
âSort of.â
âWhat does âsort of mean?â
âI picked it up at the Chanel boutique a couple of weeks ago, but this is the first time Iâve worn it.â
âHow did you pay for it? With your salaryââ
Sophie stood. âI had a relapse. Okay?â
âOh, Sophie â¦â
âIâm going to help Jeff find Cordieâs name card. Heâs wandering around in circles. When I get back, donât lecture me. I already feel guilty.â
Alec stood when Sophie did, but as soon as she walked away, he sat down again and put his arm on the back of Reganâs chair. The fringe from her wrap was draped over his hand, and when she shifted positions, his fingers brushed against her skin. She didnât move away, and neither did he.
âWhat kind of relapse was she talking about?â he asked.
âSophie asked Cordie and me to help her stop taking money from her father.â
âWhatâs the big deal? If he wants to give her money and she needs it â¦â
Regan turned to look at him. âBut she doesnât really need it. And she wants to be completely independent.â She sighed. âSophie loves her father very much, and sheâs extremely loyal to him.â
âIn other words, sheâs a typical daughter.â
She smiled. Nothing about Sophie or her father was typical. âYes,â she said. âRecently she decided that it was up to her to try to rehabilitate him, and if that didnât work, then sheâs determined to get him to retire.â
Alec literally jerked back. âAh, hell. Rose isnât her middle name, is it? Man, I didnât put it together. I should have, but I didnât. Sheâs Bobby Roseâs daughter, isnât she?â
âYes, she is.â
He was stunned. The FBI had been trailing Bobby Rose for years, trying to get enough evidence to indict him. Bobby was considered by many to be the ultimate con artist, but because he only fleeced those men and women he considered to be bigger crooks than he was, the public had taken a real shine to him. High-stakes gamblers who had robbed their own companies and who had cleaned out their employeeâs pensions and then hung them and their families out to dry were Bobbyâs meat and potatoes. Bobby Rose loved targeting the greedy bastards, and that was all the more reason the public loved him. Unfortunately, the sad truth was that Bobby was never going to run out of marks.
Not only did the public adore him, other crooks looked up to Bobby as an idol. He was everything they hoped to become. Bobby lived somewhere in Florida, and in all the articles about him, there was never any mention of a family.
âSpencer told me that a lot of people think of Bobby Rose as a modern-day Robin Hood. He only steals from the richââ
He interrupted her. âYeah, well, he doesnât give the money to the poor, now does he? He keeps it.â
Her back stiffened. âHe does a lot of charitable work.â
He gave her a look that suggested he thought she was nuts. âHeâs a criminal, Regan, and he should be behind bars.â
âItâs obvious youâve made up your mind about him, and nothing I say will change your opinion, will it?â She sounded disgruntled.
âHeâs a criminal,â he patiently repeated.
âIf youâre going to be judgmental â¦â
He was incredulous. âHave you forgotten what I do for a living?â
She turned away from him and stared at the crowd of people searching for their tables. âIâm through discussing Sophieâs father with you.â
âOh, weâve only just gotten started.â He tugged on her wrap to make her look at him and asked, âDid you tell me Sophie works for a newspaper?â
It would have been petty not to answer. âYes, she does. At her fatherâs insistence she uses her motherâs maiden name as her byline, but I think everyone at the paper knows who she is. Detective Wincott found out, and I assumed he told you.â
Wincott was probably having a real good laugh about now. âNo, he didnât tell me,â he said. âIt must have slipped his mind. What was it like for Sophie growing up with Bobby Rose for a father?â
âHeâs a very good father,â she said. âHe never missed a parent-teacher conference, and he always went to the plays and the tennis matches. He did his share of car pooling too.â
âWere there parents who wouldnât let their kids hang around Sophie?â
âYes.â
âDid your family?â
âForbid me to hang out with her? Sophie and Cordie and I had already become friends before Bobby Rose became so â¦â
âNotorious?â
âFamous,â she corrected. âMy mother was busy socializing and traveling. My grandmother was in charge of me, and when she became ill, Aiden took over. I donât think my grandmother knew who Sophieâs father was, but Aiden knew, and he didnât tell her. My brother would never forbid me to be her friend. Sophie was always welcome in our home, but I wasnât allowed to go to hers.â She smiled as she added, âI did, though, all the time.â
He was teasing when he asked, âDid you ever get down in her basement? No one knows where Bobby Rose hides all his money. Maybe itâs there.â
She put her hand down on top of his. âAlec, Sophie is my friend.â
He started to ask another question. She stopped him by squeezing his hand. âSheâs my friend.â
Chapter Thirty-two
ALEC HATED BLACK-TIE AFFAIRS, AND HE DIDNâT PARTICULARLY like the country club scene either, but he didnât mind wearing the tuxedo tonight because of Regan. There was something about her that was so compelling, so vibrant, and yet there was a vulnerability too he found utterly charming. Sophie told them a sad story about a young man she knew, and when she was finished, Regan had tears in her eyes.
âIt had a happy ending,â Sophie said.
Embarrassed by her tears, Regan dabbed at her eyes with her napkin and laughed. âIâm a crybaby.â
âThat used to be her nickname,â Sophie said.
âWhen I found out what some of the kids were calling me, I cried,â she said. âBut that was when I was in school. I got over it.â
âRegan wears her heart on her sleeve.â
Regan didnât argue. She picked up her glass of Perrier and lime and took a sip.
Alec loved watching her expressions. She was so refreshingly different. What she was feeling was right there for anyone to see. She wasnât a game player, and she wasnât the least bit self-serving or self-involved. That, too, was a refreshing change from the other women heâd known.
Regan had a face that could grace the cover of a fashion magazine and an incredible body, but what he liked most about her was her loyalty to her friends. Well, maybe not most of all, he admitted. Her body was pretty damned great.
But she was still just a job. He had to remind himself of that fact every time he looked at that sweet mouth of hers.
Sophie excused herself to go search for her date. Alec sat down again, declined the wine
the waiter was offering, and asked Regan, âIs that any good?â with a nod toward her nonalcoholic drink.
She handed the glass to him and watched him gulp it down. Smiling she said, âYou were supposed to take a sip.â
âI never sip. If Iâm gonna drink something, I donât fool around,â he said. âAnd that pretty much defines my philosophy of life.â
âDonât sip, gulp?â When he nodded, she laughed. âYou belonged to a fraternity when you were in college, didnât you?â
âSure did,â he said. âI ate a lot of potato chips too.â
He put the empty glass down, ordered two more, one for Regan and one for himself, and then said, âHeads up.â
âExcuse me?â
âAidenâs here.â
She was still smiling when she turned and watched her brother walk into the ballroom. He didnât have a date, and he didnât notice Regan, but then she was all but hidden in the back corner. She watched him walk toward the podium, where Daniel OâDonnell, the administrator of Parkdale Hospital, stood waiting for him.
Sophie also saw Aiden as she was making her way back to their table. She hurried to intercept him, said something that made him smile, then stretched up and kissed him on the cheek.
Spencer walked in a minute later with Cordie at his side. He, too, was smiling. Her brother looked relaxed, she thought. Sleep-deprived, but relaxed. Jet lag would, no doubt, catch up with him tomorrow.
âThe man with Cordie â¦â
âSpencer, right?â
âYes, thatâs right.â
âI see the family resemblance,â he said. âBut I also recognized him from a newspaper photo Henry showed me. You and your brothers were at a dedication. Henry told me he was going to have the photo framed because it was rare for all of you to be together.â
She nodded. âThatâs true. It seems the only time we get together is when thereâs a funeral or a crisis.â
âA what?â
âA crisis.â
He leaned his elbows on the table and thought about what sheâd just said.
Regan looked back at Spencer and said, âI should go say hello to my brother.â
âTwo brothers are here,â he said.
She smiled. âYes, but Iâm only going to be nice to one of them.â
He smiled. âSpoken like a true sister.â
The knot in her wrap came undone, and when she pushed her chair back to stand, it fell to the floor.
He bolted to his feet. The dress showed off her attributes a little too well for his liking. No, that wasnât exactly true. He liked looking at her. He just didnât want anyone else to.
He was about to tell her to put the blanket back on when she turned to him. They stood just inches apart, her face upturned to his. If he moved so much as a couple of inches, his mouth would be on top of hers. He stopped himself in time. It wasnât his place to tell her what she could or couldnât wear, no matter how much it bothered him. If he tried that on one of his sisters, sheâd laugh right in his face. Then sheâd give him hell.
Regan wasnât his sister, though. Sheâs a job, nothing more. Those words became a chant inside his head, and yet he was having trouble accepting it.
âAlec? You were saying?â
âStay in the room,â he said gruffly. âIâll be watching, but stay in the room.â
âYes, of course.â
Cordie was bringing Spencer to Regan. She met them halfway across the ballroom, hugged her brother, and welcomed him home.
Alec watched the reunion as he pulled out his cell phone. He dialed Wincottâs cell number. The detective answered on the second ring.
Alec didnât waste time on pleasantries. âCheck out the brothers.â
âThe ball that boring, huh?â
âI mean it. Check them out.â
âWe already have,â he said. âAnd youâre not supposed to have any involvement in the investigation.â
It was almost impossible for Alec to back off. He didnât want to jeopardize Wincottâs future with the department, and he knew that if Lewis found out he was doing anything more than guarding Regan, he would make Wincottâs life miserable.
âSo what are you thinking?â Wincott asked.
âMaybe this guy is after the whole family, or maybe heâs using Regan to get all the brothers back in Chicago. I know youâve checked them out, but go deeper. There might be something there.â
âOkay,â he said. âWeâll dig deeper.â
âLook, I know youâre overworked and understaffed. Iâll call Gil and ask him to check out a couple of things.â
âSo youâre not involved, but you are?â
âI really want to follow up on a hunch.â
âThatâs fine with me ⦠if Gil doesnât mind.â
âDid anything come up on Regan?â
âSince you asked this morning? No. The people she turned down for grants were the only ones who had a grudge. Although, there were a couple of nutcasesâyou know, people who wanted money for weird inventionsâbut they checked out okay. Weird, but okay,â he said. âI already told you weâre looking at Peter Morris,â he added. âHer friends checked out too. I guess by now youâve figured out who Sophie Roseâs father is.â
âThanks for telling me.â
Wincott laughed. âI almost fell off the chair when I found out. It doesnât appear to make any difference to Regan or her brothers. They donât blame the daughter for the sins of her father.â
âThatâs the way it should be.â
âWeâve ruled Bobby Rose out. Iâm getting another call.â
Alec flipped the phone closed and put it back in his pocket. He stood with his back to the wall, his arms folded across his chest, watching the crowd.
Aiden had joined his brother and sister. Cordie seemed to be the only one interested in what he had to say. No, interested wasnât the right description, Alec thought. She looked enthralled. Regan, on the other hand, looked furious. Aiden was still talking when she shook her head, turned, and walked back to their table. Several men tried to engage her in conversation, but other than smiling at each one, she paid them no attention and continued on.
Alec pulled the chair out for her, but she didnât sit. She stood next to him and stared at the entrance.
Cordie had followed Regan, and she smiled when Alec pulled her chair out for her. âWho are you looking for?â she asked Regan as she placed the napkin on her lap. She turned around to see who Regan was watching, and then said, âOh, I see.â
âSee what?â Alec asked.
âMr. and Mrs. Sleazebag just walked in,â Cordie said.
Alec didnât comment, but he did track the couple as they made their way around the tables to get to their seats. Emersonâs face was red, no doubt from alcohol, Alec thought. His wife was adjusting her bodice and fluffing her long platinum hair. An interesting couple, he decided, and he wondered what Wincott had found out about them.
Sophie and Jeff returned to the table, and Sophie craned her neck so she, too, could watch the couple. When they had taken their seats, she turned to Regan and said, âThe whole familyâs here. Isnât that lovely?â
âJust super.â
âWalker isnât here,â Cordie pointed out.
âI was being sarcastic,â Sophie said. She told Regan and Alec to sit down, for heavenâs sake, and then added, âAiden had no right to invite Emerson. He knows how Regan feels about him. I think it was terribly disloyal of him, and I told him so.â
Cordie immediately rushed to Aidenâs defense. âYou canât know if he invited him or not.â
âOf course I can know,â Sophie countered. âAiden told me he invited him,â she rushed to add when Cordie looked as if she was going to argue.
âWhat did he say when you called him disloyal?â Cordie asked.
âHe said it was cheaper than a lawsuit and for me to behave myself tonight,â Sophie said. âHe still treats me like Iâm a ten-year-old.â
Waiters appeared with the first cou
rse. The conversation turned to lighter topics during dinner, and Regan was thankful for that. Jeff told several humorous stories about a tennis competition heâd entered, and Regan tried to look interested. She wasnât hungry. Seeing Emerson had destroyed her appetite, but no one seemed to notice she was moving the food around her plate.
After dinner, but before the dancing began, Daniel OâDonnell stepped up to the podium and tapped on the microphone to get everyoneâs attention.
âPlease tell me there arenât going to be a dozen or so boring speakers,â Cordie said.
âJust one boring speaker,â Regan replied.
âFor a thousand dollars a plate, we shouldnât have to listen to anyone,â Sophie said.
âHush,â Cordie whispered. âPeople can hear you.â
A moment later, after the administrator had thanked everyone for attending, he introduced Regan. Cordie and Sophie both laughed.
âKeep it short and sweet,â Sophie said.
âAs opposed to long and boring?â Regan teased.
Deciding to wing it, she left the note cards in her purse. Alec stood when she did, but he didnât follow her. He watched the crowd and the doors. He did notice that every eye was on Regan as she made her way to the podium.
It took her all of thirty seconds to hook her audience and less than that to mesmerize them.
The hospital was located in the heart of the inner city, and Regan stressed the importance of keeping it open. There was a desperate need for money and for additional beds, which meant a drive to expand.
âAnd thatâs why youâre here,â she said.
They were smiling as she reeled them in. Alec was amazed. She talked about money, and she got them to listen. She had her audience in the palm of her hand, and by the time she finished, Alec wanted to empty his savings account to help out. She was that good.
There was such passion in her voice and a determination to get the job done. It was a side of her Alec hadnât seen until tonight, and he was all the more impressed. The woman just kept getting better and better.
She received a standing ovation and was immediately surrounded by guests. Alec didnât like the crowd pressing in on her. He went to her, put his arm around her, and pulled her back so that her shoulders were pressed against his chest.