“She and her husband should have been prosecuted for child abuse and endangerment.” And the old man for rape.
“Did you tell the social worker about the abuse?” he asked.
Avery averted her face. “No. I was too ashamed at the time. I thought...that I did something wrong. And Wade said if I told, he’d kill me and Hank.”
He wished Wade were alive so he could kill him himself.
Worse, if the social worker hadn’t documented evidence of abuse, then it was Avery and Hank’s word against a dead man’s. A prosecutor would argue that they’d invented the story to save Hank.
But he didn’t think Avery was lying about the abuse. That kind of pain was hard to fake.
Besides, any woman who stood by and allowed abuse of any kind to take place in her home was just as guilty as the perpetrator.
Although psychologists argued women were too afraid physically of their abusers to leave or stand up to them. And they often felt trapped by financial circumstances.
Worse, if a woman sent her abuser to jail, when he was released he often went straight home and took his anger out on her all over again.
It was a flawed system, but if it were his child, he’d die to protect him or her.
“I’ll find her,” Jaxon said. “I’d also like to speak with the social worker who placed you and Hank in that home.”
Because that social worker should have realized what was happening and stopped it.
* * *
AVERY COULDN’T BELIEVE the Ranger’s words or that his voice sounded sincere. But something about the man’s gruff exterior and those deep-set dark, fathomless eyes, told her that he was a man of his word.
Not like any other man she’d ever known.
Don’t believe him, a little voice in her head whispered. Men who make promises either lie or have their own agenda.
He’ll want something in return.
She was not the kind of girl to do favors like that.
“You really are going to talk to them?” she asked.
He tipped his Stetson, a sexy move that spoke of respect and manners and...made her heart flutter with female nerves.
Good heavens. She had to get a grip. Jaxon Ward was a Texas Ranger. And she needed his help for Hank.
Nothing more.
He took a step closer, his masculine scent wafting toward her and playing havoc with her senses. “Hank said he stabbed Wade Mulligan, but that he was already dead. If you didn’t deliver the deadly blow and Hank didn’t, that means there was someone else in the house.” The silver star on his chest glittered in the harsh lights. “Who else might have wanted the man dead?”
Avery had desperately tried to forget everything about the man. But if she wanted to help Hank, she had to confront the past.
“Avery, can you think of anyone?”
“His wife,” she said, her heart thundering. “If she knew he was coming into my room, maybe she tried to stop him.”
Jaxon’s expression was grim. “That makes sense, but didn’t she have an alibi for that night?”
Avery’s head swam. “She claimed she was at her mother’s.” Panic began to claw at her chest. “Maybe Joleen lied about going to her mother’s. Or she could have come back for some reason, and she saw Wade tie up Hank and come into my room. Then she slipped in and killed him.”
Although even as she suggested the possibility, despair threatened. The problem with that theory was that Joleen hadn’t cared for her or Hank.
She certainly hadn’t loved them enough to kill her husband for them.
* * *
JAXON GRIMACED. DISCUSSING the case would definitely reopen old wounds for Avery, but questions had to be asked and answered. “Do you know if Mrs. Mulligan continued to take in foster children after her husband was murdered?”
“I have no idea what happened to her,” Avery said.
“What about the social worker who placed you with the Mulligans? What was her name?”
Avery rubbed her forehead as if thinking back. “I...think it was Donna. No, Delia. I don’t know her last name.”
“There should be records,” Jaxon said. “What do remember about her?”
Avery shrugged. “Not much. She gave me candy on the ride to the Mulligans’ the day she dropped us off.” Her voice cracked. “But I don’t remember her coming back to visit.”
Jaxon bit back a response. “Did she testify at your brother’s trial?”
Avery rubbed the scar around her wrist. “I don’t think so. But I was so young that they didn’t let me inside for some of the trial.”
That made sense.
“I’ll pull the transcripts from the trial and review them, then question her.”
Avery squared her shoulders. “I’d like to go with you to see her.”
He hesitated. “I’m not sure that’s a good idea.”
Avery folded her arms, a stubborn tilt to her chin. “I may have been a child then, Sergeant, but I’m not anymore. My testimony put my brother in prison, and got him the death penalty. Now that I know he’s innocent, I have to make things right.”
Jaxon lowered his voice. “Avery, do you think it’s possible that Hank twisted the truth because he’s afraid to die?”
She shook her head. “No. Hank’s not like that. He always owned up to things he did wrong. Even if it meant he’d be punished for it. Besides, he just said that he confessed because he thought I killed Wade.”
Oddly it sounded as though Hank Tierney had character, that he wasn’t the bad seed the prosecutor had painted him to be.
And if a jury heard his testimony now and heard Avery’s story, they might let Hank Tierney go.
So why hadn’t the D.A. and Tierney’s defense attorney pleaded not guilty and put the kid on the stand?
Dammit, he needed to see the autopsy report for Wade Mulligan. If someone else had delivered the fatal stab wound before Hank Tierney had unleashed his rage, it might show up in the autopsy report.