The Deadliest
Denial
May 2006
Here�s a sneak preview of
The Deadliest Denial, by Colleen Thompson, coming in
May, 2006 from Dorchester Publishing. Copyright 2006, all rights reserved.
CHAPTER ONE
Hardly a day goes by that we don�t hear it. On
the news and in the papers or from stories
passed along by friends or family members. How
someone, usually a woman, has been destroyed by
a man she loved and trusted. Beaten sometimes.
Humiliated, violated, ripped off, and betrayed.
And then there are the times it comes to
murder.
But as we chew these stories over, we think
of all the ways it might have been, could have
been, probably was her fault. Overwhelmed by
the sheer volume of examples, we make ourselves
feel safer by pointing out the signs the woman
missed � or stubbornly refused to recognize.
Telling ourselves we would know better and we
would be bold enough to face the truth, unlike
the foolish creature whose sad fate made the
news.
Afterwards, we turn back to our own lives,
to the same bad habits, poor decisions, and
fractured resolutions we stumble over almost
daily. But that�s all right, we think, feeling
superior in the knowledge that we may have our
human foibles, but we didn�t fall victim to the
worst.
As of this day, this moment, we have not
yet partaken of the deadliest denial.
#
The worst day in Claire Winslow�s life
started early, with a banging at the front door
that began at five A.M.
Predictably, the three-legged sheltie
Spence had brought home last year barked her
fool head off, so Claire�s first impulse was to
chase the brown-and-white hairball to the
condo�s living room and stop the noise before it
woke the neighbors.
Her second was to stare in horror at the
door as a wave of dizziness broke over her and
her body trembled like the most damaged of her
patients at the rehabilitation center.
Spence was due home from his shift this
morning. But her husband would never bother
knocking. Instead, he would try to steal in
silently � a real feat, considering Pogo�s
joyful histrionics whenever she spotted her
master returning to the fold. On those
occasions when he managed to slip past their
sleeping pet, he would remove his badge and
holster, then rouse his wife of five years with
kisses . . . and often something more. Or at
least he�d done that up until his friend Dave
Creighton�s death back in October.
When the hammering repeated, she let go of
the wriggling sheltie and switched on the
nearest lamp against the predawn gloom.
Bursting into motion, Claire trotted back into
her bedroom and grabbed her robe, her mind
stumbling through the thought: If Spence�s
dead, I�m not letting them tell me while I stand
there in one of his old tee shirts.
If Spence�s dead . . . God, no.
She pulled the robe around her tighter and
told Pogo, �If your dad�s just forgotten his
keys, I�m going to chew his ears off.�
It would serve her husband right, too, for
scaring her to death. Every cop knew his wife
worried, even if it was the proverbial elephant
in the living room they both tiptoed around, the
big dread neither dared to speak of --
especially in the past five months.
And now it�s gone and happened anyway, she
thought as her feet, seemingly detached from her
free will, carried her to the door and her
traitorous hand fingered the deadbolt.
Pogo quieted, then crouched expectantly on
her single foreleg, her body quivering with the
need to either bark or wag, depending on who
stood behind the still-closed door.
A memory tumbled through Claire�s mind: her
husband�s reminder only last week that this was
San Antonio and not her goddamned
wide-spot-in-the-road-of-a-hometown and she�d
end up dead as Dave if she didn�t watch
herself. He�d been furious at the moment, but
it was the absolute terror shining in his blue
eyes that made her hesitate now, leaning forward
to peer through the peephole, her lips moving in
a silent prayer: Be Spence, be Spence, be
Spence.
It wasn�t. With a cry, she fumbled through
unlatching the chain and releasing the locks,
then threw open the door and asked the two
uniformed men, �Is he dead? Or in the
hospital? Has someone shot my husband? Why are
you here � tell me.�
Pogo lowered her crouch and whined
plaintively at the pair. Though mismatched both
in terms of uniform and appearance, the men
stood shoulder to shoulder, their backs as
straight as steel spikes and their hats held in
their hands.
Claire�s gaze bored into the smaller and
darker of the two, the newly-divorced sergeant
she and Spence had had over for dinner just last
Sunday. Claire had invited him out of sympathy,
but she�d gotten the impression he had accepted
to see how Spence was behaving around her. To
make sure what was happening at work hadn�t
leached into their home life.
Now, Raul Contreras shook his head before
releasing a long breath through his nose. He
looked hard at her, his deep-set brown gaze so
sorrowful that she was reminded of the doctor
who had told her, years before, that her sister
Karen�s cancer had spread to the brain.
Claire�s pulse thumped wildly. She was going to
die, she thought. Her heart was exploding in
her chest. She wished for a split second that
it would hurry up and take her.
�No,� Sergeant Contreras told her.
�Spencer hasn�t been killed, and he�s not hurt
either.�
At first, she simply stared, unable to move
or speak or draw breath. Had she heard him
right, or had her mind manufactured the words
that she most needed?
Hoping for some clue, she looked to the
taller man, whose tan uniform stood out in
contrast to the dark blue of the San Antonio
PD. His hair was thick and golden brown and
long for law enforcement; his features were
strong, his shoulders wide and heavily muscled,
as if he�d spent his youth alternating between
football fields and weight rooms.
But he hadn�t. Claire knew that because
she knew him �� a fact that shocked her. What
was Joel Shepherd from her hometown doing here,
at her front door?
�Spence isn�t dead?� she asked both men.
She needed that confirmation more than she
needed answers � or even air to breathe.
�He�s not dead,� Joel answered, his voice
deeper than she remembered, his eyes a golder
shade of green. But his expression remained as
grim as the day they�d buried Karen � the girl
he should have married instead of Lori Beth
Walters, one of her sister�s classmates. �I
swear it.�
Closing her eyes, Claire whispered, �Thank
God. Thank God. Thank God.�
Anything else she could handle. Anything
else she could survive.
But she didn�t understand that there were
worse things. Possibilities too dark to
fathom. Possibilities she first heard in the
raw emotion of Sergeant Contreras�s and Joel
Shepherd�s questions.
�May � may we come in?� her husband�s
supervisor asked.
�Can we call someone to be with you?� Joel
added, and for the first time she noticed he
wore a sheriff�s badge, not a deputy�s, as he
did the last time she had heard. �How �bout
your daddy, maybe, or a friend?�
He was laying on the good old boy a little
thicker, playing up the country lawman comfort
in a way that jolted forks of fear through her
midsection.
Shaking her head, Claire backed up, pausing
only to snatch up the fifteen-pound dog and
press her lower face into the thick warmth of
Pogo�s fur.
All the better not to scream, Claire
thought as the two men entered her living room.
Joel closed the door softly, but he didn�t lock
it. Perhaps he felt safe with his gun in its
holster, or perhaps he realized, as Claire was
beginning to, that the worst had come already.
�Why don�t you sit down?� Contreras asked
her.
Lifting her chin from the dog�s warmth,
Claire felt her temper boil to the surface.
�And why don�t you quit patronizing me and tell
me right out � where the hell is Spencer? Why
are you two here instead of him?�
The sergeant took another deep breath.
�Last night, your husband was arrested.�
�He�s bein� held in Little Bee Creek, in
the Buck County Jail,� Joel added. �My jail.�
Claire�s knees loosened, and the miniature
collie yelped in surprise as she was dropped,
then tucked her tail between her legs and
hop-bounced to escape into the bedroom. Before
Claire understood what was happening, the two
men grabbed her arms and steered her to an
armchair, where they planted her.
Shrugging off their hands, she cried,
�That�s a lie. Why would you say such � such -
Spence can�t be in Little BC. He was on patrol
last night down by the River Walk. Right here
in San Antonio.�
She saw the two men�s glances touch, saw how
troubled both looked. When neither answered,
she said, �Damn you. Damn you both � did my
husband put you up to this? If this is some
sick joke, it�s not funny.�
Joel sat on the sofa�s edge and angled his
long legs in her direction. Those green-gold
eyes skewered her, reminding her of the cougars
rumored to have come back to Buck County. �This
is serious, Claire, and so am I. You�re going
to need somebody with you. Tell me now so I can
call. And then we�ll explain it to you.�
She flipped her red-brown hair free of her
robe�s collar. �All of it?�
When both men nodded solemnly, Claire
relented. �Call my father. Please. He�s
number two on my speed dial.�
Number one was the entry she really
wanted. Spence�s number. If she could talk to
him, he�d clear up this mistake in no time.
But Joel got up to call her father, then
took the telephone into her bedroom and closed
the door behind him. She tried to listen, but a
buzzing in her ears overwhelmed the distant
murmur of his voice.
�My dad�s a criminal attorney, and he lives
in Little BC,� she told Sergeant Contreras.
�He�ll know how to fix this. He�ll probably
drive over to the jail and call us right back,
tell us it�s not Spence in there. You�ve told
me yourself, Spence is a really good cop. He
wouldn�t be arrested.�
The sergeant took the spot where Joel had
been seated and looked at her from beneath the
shaggy overhang of his brows. Like his hair and
his thick mustache, they were salted with white
strands, the only clue the man had recently
celebrated his fiftieth birthday.
�I know this is hard,� he said. �It�s damned
hard for me, too, first losing Dave and now . .
. The truth is, Claire, Spencer hasn�t been
himself lately. You know that as well as I do.�
�He saw a twelve-year-old shoot down a
fellow cop.� Claire heard the strain in her own
voice, the bitterness that bubbled through her
words � but there was nothing she could do to
stop the torrent. �My husband watched his best
friend die over a forty-nine-dollar video
game.�
Mall security, who had called police once they
caught the shoplifter, had brought him to their
office, but they hadn�t searched his clothes for
weapons. When the two uniforms came in, the kid
had panicked, whipping a little .38 out from
under his untucked shirt, killing Dave and
wounding the store detective before Spence shot
the boy dead.
�How can you expect him to snap right back
like it was nothing?� Claire demanded. �Aside
from losing a close friend, Spence loves kids.
And now he�s killed one.�
There had been knee-jerk outrage in the
Hispanic community, since the boy was Mexican
and Dave, Spence, and the store detective all
white, but the store�s video surveillance tape
had cleared her husband of wrongdoing. Still,
he�d asked Claire over and over � sometimes
waking her up in the middle of the night - if
there was anything, anything, he could have done
to save either his friend or the kid. Every
time, she�d told him no, then wrapped her arms
around a body made unfamiliar by its tension.
�Spencer said he�d had enough time off,
enough of counseling,� Contreras told her. �And
I was keeping a careful eye on him, believe me.�
�Not careful enough, it sounds like. Not
if he really did leave his patrol to drive over
an hour to Buck County last night. I still
don�t buy it.� She expected her husband�s big
frame to fill the doorway any moment, expected
to hear Pogo�s cheerful barking to see her
master � the man who had once lifted her from a
busy street, where he had found her matted and
bone thin, with one front leg mangled from a
run-in with a car.
�He didn�t work last night, Claire. He
called in sick before his shift.�
The shock of it went through her, and she
wanted to scream, Impossible. Would have
screamed, if she could speak. Because she�d
kissed Spence goodbye last night and watched him
leave wearing his uniform, his badge . . . his
gun.
His gun.
�What did he do, Sergeant?� she asked in a
small voice.
�We believe he killed a man in Little BC.�
She blinked in surprise at Joel Shepherd,
who was standing in the bedroom doorway.
Sheriff Shepherd. She hadn�t noticed him come
back from calling her dad. But it was his words
and not his presence that made her mouth go dry.
�No,� she told him, shaking her head. �Of
course he didn�t do that. Why would Spence kill
anyone up there? I mean, that�s where we have
our --�
She clamped down on the thought. This
couldn�t have anything to do with the Little BC
property she and Spence had just purchased and
the horse therapy center she had been planning,
organizing, and raising funds for over the past
two years. This had nothing to do with her
dream �
The dream that Spence had asked her to put
on hold in the days following Dave�s shooting.
She�d told him no, she couldn�t. She�d
tried to make him understand that it was then or
never, that if they didn�t close on the acreage
before Mrs. Hajek moved into the nursing home,
her heir would be sure to stop the sale.
Already, her realtor nephew �who hadn�t bothered
visiting his aunt in years � had accused Claire
of taking advantage of a dying woman. If Mrs.
Hajek herself hadn�t rallied and threatened to
disinherit the grasping little snot, Claire was
sure the whole thing would have ended up in
court. And if the woman�s long-missing
daughter, Gloria, had finally turned up . . .
�We aren�t sure what this is about,� Joel
said as he crossed the room to stand beside
her. �But we do know this. Adam Strickland
wasn�t the only person ��
�Adam � Adam who?� The name struck her as
familiar, but Claire couldn�t seem to place it.
�Adam Strickland,� Joel answered, pausing
only to clear his throat, �wasn�t the only
person your husband wanted dead. There was
someone else, too.�
�Someone else?� She was still trying to
make sense of this � or find the key that would
unlock this awful nightmare and let her wake up
in her bed.
From the bedroom, she heard her alarm go
off, an alarm meant to begin her last day at the
rehabilitation center, where she had worked for
the past five years as an occupational
therapist.
This is no dream, she told herself as Joel
Shepherd knelt before her. No dream, the
thought echoed as he took her ice-cold hand in
his.
�It was you,� Joel told her. �Your
husband, Spencer Winslow, was planning to kill
you.�
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