A brow shot up. “In bed.”
“Anyone’s bed I know who can give you an alibi?”
She pouted. “In my own bed, alone.”
He shook his head. “Give me your car keys.”
“What?”
“Your car keys. Now.”
“I’ll have to go upstairs and get them.” Her cheeks flamed with obvious anger as if the walk was more than she was up to this morning. Or maybe it was being caught.
“I’ll wait.”
She turned her back on him to buzz the housekeeper on the intercom. “Get me some juice,” she snapped. “Orange juice. A large glass.” Then she left the room.
He half expected to hear the sports car engine roar to life, but Desiree was too used to getting out of scrapes to make a run for it. Daddy always bailed her out. Only Daddy couldn’t even make bail himself right now. And maybe Mommy was over Desiree’s shenanigans.
But it was Daisy who returned with the car keys.
“If you had told me why you were here, I could have saved you the trouble of waking Desiree. I was driving my daughter’s car last night.”
He stared at her, not bothering to take the keys she held out to him. “You were the one up Maple Creek Road? You realize that’s the local make-out spot?”
She smiled. “Is it? I’m afraid I was only turning around. I took Desiree’s car because I felt like having the top down. I pulled into the turnoff at Maple Creek Road. I didn’t see the biker. I know I should have reported it at once.”
“Or maybe stopped to see if the biker wasn’t killed.”
Daisy blanched. “Is he all right?”
Jesse didn’t correct her on the rider’s gender. “Yeah.”
Her expression said she expected charges to be filed, probably a lawsuit by the biker, maybe even her own arrest, but she was ready. Like her daughter, she’d always come away from scrapes unscathed. Except for the loss of her youngest daughter, Angela, when Desiree was two.
“Are you sure you want to take the rap for your daughter?” Jesse asked, holding her gaze. “I know Desiree was driving the car. I saw her.”
“Really? You were making out on Maple Creek Road last night, deputy?” Daisy asked.
He smiled. “No, I was standing on the deck of my cabin. I can see the highway from there.”
“From your house?” Daisy repeated. “From that distance and in the dark you are absolutely sure it was Desiree behind the wheel?”
“Yes.”
“How is that possible when I was the one driving her car?” Daisy asked.
He knew exactly what she was saying. He could call her a liar and press this. It would be his word against hers. He might be wearing a deputy’s uniform but she would be more credible—even after the shoot-out in her pool house. Maybe more so because she had come off as the victim. Plus she would hire the best attorney money could buy.
“Look, the worst that will happen is Desiree will lose her driver’s license,” he said patiently. “And you know that’s probably the best thing that could happen, getting her off the streets for a while. Next time she might kill someone. Or herself. And there will be a next time.”
“I told you I was the one—”
“I know what you told me,” Jesse interrupted. “You also told me that Wade was the one who shot my brother but it was your gun and your hand over Wade’s when the shots were fired.”
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