“SO, YOU BREAK my brother’s heart, now you’re running away. You really are a piece of work.” Shannon O’Shea was the last person Briana had expected to see on her doorstep. The woman eyed the packing boxes in the hall as though she’d like to kick them. After their conversation at Dylan’s birthday party about how Shannon would take Briana apart if she ever hurt Patrick, maybe she should have expected the tough-talking firefighter to show up at her door with vengeance sparking from her eyes.
“Have you come to beat me up?” Briana asked. She was so deep in misery she didn’t care. A little physical pain might help relieve the inner ache. Of course, Shannon knew of Briana’s treachery. Everyone in the city probably knew about it by now. “I know I deserve to be beaten up. Go ahead.”
Her eyes were red-rimmed from crying, her cheeks chapped. She’d never been a pretty crier. Even her hair seemed depressed. It hung lank around her face since she hadn’t bothered to do anything with it once she’d got out of the shower. What was the point?
“Don’t tempt me. I’d like to smack you from here to tomorrow. I just left my brother looking almost as bad as he did the day they buried his wife.” Shannon stepped over a half-packed box and glared. “How could you do this to him?”
Briana had believed she was all cried out, but discovered there was a fresh supply of tears just waiting to flood her cheeks.
“I couldn’t,” she sobbed. “I believed he’d leaked that story about my uncle Cecil and the prostitute that ran in the paper, the one that cost Uncle Cecil the election and allowed Patrick to win.” She stopped to blow her nose on a tissue she’d stuffed in her pocket. It was already tear-damp. “But he didn’t. He-he wasn’t even the one who l-leaked the story to the paper.”
“Of course he wasn’t. What were you thinking?” Shannon yelled at her. “My brother is the most honest, uncomplicated man there ever was. He had to be bullied into running for mayor.” She stomped farther inside and slammed the front door behind her. “Believe me, he’d have been relieved if he’d lost the election.”
“Okay, so I know that now. I didn’t at the time.”
“I heard Patrick’s version of the story. Now I’d like to hear yours.”
“Patrick wouldn’t listen.” She wiped her wet face with the back of her hand. “I was going to tell him last night. I planned to tell him everything.” She shook her head. “No. That’s not true. I was never going to tell him about the tape. I was going to destroy it. Except I lost it. Remember when I phoned you to see if you’d found anything in the elevator? I made up some lame excuse about a missing earring, but it was the tape I wanted. So I could destroy it.”
Briana grabbed a fresh tissue. “Would you like some coffee?”
“Yeah.”
So the two of them sat in the kitchen and drank coffee. Because she was such an emotional wreck, Briana wasn’t the most efficient packer today. There were plates piled on the counter, but she hadn’t boxed them yet. Cutlery was in a silver heap by the sink. Some things she couldn’t decide whether to keep or chuck were sitting on the counter beside the fridge. And blazing down at her from its prized spot on the refrigerator door was the picture Dylan had drawn for her. She cried anew every time she glimpsed it, but she wouldn’t take it down. She deserved the punishment.
“Sorry about the mess. I need to get more boxes.” Except she couldn’t make herself go out to get them. She thought people might hiss at her and throw rotten eggs and tomatoes.
Taking a sip of coffee, she told Shannon the truth. All of it. “I was wrong. What I did was terrible.” A tear dripped into her coffee, rippling the surface. Usually she added milk, but today black suited her mood.
“What did you do with the tape?” Shannon asked. She’d listened in silence to the story and now stared at Briana with an implacable expression.
“It’s in a million pieces in the garbage can.”
“A million pieces?”
Briana nodded. “First I mashed it with a hammer, then I cut the tape up with scissors.” She sniffed. “Then I burned it.”
“I see.”
“I thought it might make me feel better. But it didn’t. At least no one will ever be able to play that tape.”
“Patrick’s sitting in his office expecting a media scrum any minute. He thinks you’re still out to destroy him.”
“No!” She leaped to her feet, knocking the table so the coffee sloshed in their cups and slopped over the sides. “How can he believe that? I told him I would never use that tape. Why didn’t he believe me?”
“I leave that to you to decide,” Shannon said. “He told me he won’t hide from the truth. He’s all ready to make a public confession.”
“But, we have to stop him. He’ll hurt his career if he does that.”
“He thinks you’re trying to kill his career, you and your uncle.”
She shook her head. “Please, will you tell him no one will ever know about us?” She sniffed dismally at the thought. “And tell him I destroyed that stupid tape. I would never have used it against him anyway. I couldn’t.”
“I don’t think Patrick would believe anything you told him. Not sure I do, either.”
Briana dug into the pocket of her old jeans and pulled out a piece of metal. She handed it to Shannon.
“What is this? It looks like shrapnel.”
“It’s part of the tape recorder. I found it in the driveway this morning.”
Shannon ’s eyebrows rose. “You sure did a number on that thing.”
“I made a terrible mistake. I’m sorry.”
“Well, sister,” Shannon said, dropping the twisted piece of metal to the table with a clink, “sorry isn’t going to cut it. What do you plan to do about your mistake?”
Shannon was an imposing woman at the best of times, but in uniform, and standing at her full height of close to six feet, she was downright intimidating.
“I’m leaving the city. I’ll start over somewhere new.” She almost choked on the words, realizing, now that it was too late, how much she’d come to love Courage Bay and feel at home.
“Like I figured. You’re running away.”
“Do you think you could leave me a little pride?” Briana was crying openly again, the tears running down her face faster than she could wipe them away.
“Nope.” Shannon passed her a half-empty box of tissues from the kitchen counter.
“Did you come to gloat?”
“No. I came to make sure you do the right thing.”
“I’m doing the best I can,” Briana sniffed. “I’m leaving. Patrick can forget about me and move on with his life.”
“And what about his kids? What about Dylan and Fiona?” Shannon asked.
Even hearing their names had Briana’s misery increasing. Oh, she was going to miss them. How could she not have noticed that she’d fallen in love with them, too?
“My leaving is the best thing for them. They’ll get over me.”
“I told you before, I only care about my family. And you are not going anywhere before you say goodbye to those kids.”
“But Patrick would-”
“The hell with Patrick. He’s not thinking any straighter than you are. Dylan and Fiona already had one woman they loved leave them without saying goodbye. Did you ever think of that? Instead of whining and sniveling over yourself, maybe you could think about how those kids are going to feel if they never see you again and never understand why. Do you think that’s good for them?”
Briana shook her head, her misery so deep she’d lost the ability to think. Shannon was right, though. How selfish of her not to realize she owed those children a proper goodbye.
“Okay. You’re right. I’ll go and see them.” She gestured vaguely around her. “Just as soon as I finish packing.”
“The kids’ll be home from school by now. I’ll take you.”
Briana gaped.
“Come on. I’ve got to get back to the station house. I don’t have all day.”
“I can drive myself.”
“Quit arguing and come on.”
Since Shannon was fitter, stronger and bigger than she was, Briana didn’t have much choice but to obey. It was best to get this over with anyway.
She shoved her feet into sneakers and they walked outside. Briana blinked.
“You came here in an official fire department vehicle?”
“Be glad it’s not a police cruiser or you’d be in the back wearing cuffs.”
LUCY BROUGHT Patrick a sandwich and put it on his desk without even being asked. Okay, so maybe she did show some initiative. Because he didn’t want to act as churlish as he felt, he thanked her and ate it. He couldn’t have said afterward what the filling was.
He went back to pretending to work, and his next visitor was the last one he’d have expected, and the least welcome.
His intercom buzzed.
“Councilman Thomson is here to see you,” Lucy said.
“Tell him-” Patrick stopped before he could claim he was too busy. Thomson wanted to gloat about the tape? Fine. Patrick had a few words he’d like to say to that slimeball himself. “Tell him to come in.”
He rose so he was standing at his full height behind his imposing desk when the councilman walked in.
Patrick didn’t even make a pretense of offering to shake hands, and Thomson didn’t, either. Even knowing there was a blood relationship between this man and Briana, Patrick was hard-pressed to see it. They both had green eyes, and that was it for any physical resemblance. But it seemed Cecil Thomson and Briana Bliss’s characters were more similar than their looks, as he’d discovered at his cost.
“What do you want?” Patrick asked coldly.
Thomson looked gray, and his hand shook as he produced a paper from his briefcase and placed it on Patrick’s desk. “It’s my vote for the approval of expenditure of public funds for emergency services.”
“What?” Patrick could barely believe his ears. He’d expected a gloating Thomson had come to blackmail him into resigning, which of course he wouldn’t have countenanced. He’d planned to go down fighting.
Patrick snatched up the document to read it, and found it was indeed an approval for the release of the emergency funding.
“Why are you doing this?”
“I’m not a man for apologies, but it seems I wronged you. I’m trying to make it up.”
Patrick put the paper back on his desk. “You wronged me, all right. You think this is going to make everything fine?” His anger roared back. This was probably some trick, and as soon as the funding was announced, Thomson would leak that damn tape. Patrick wondered if that would be his punishment. He’d get the funding, but it would be Thomson of all people who’d administer it. Well, getting the funding was the right thing to do, and if losing his job was the price he had to pay to get it, he supposed he’d pay.
“No.” The older man sighed heavily and sank into one of Patrick’s visitor chairs, though he hadn’t been invited. He reached into his briefcase and pulled out another document. “My resignation.”
“You’re resigning from council so you’ll have more time to run for mayor?” Patrick asked.
Thomson looked up at him and he saw the older man’s eyes were red-rimmed and baggy. He looked old and defeated.
Thomson shook his head. “I’m done with politics. I’m taking my wife away for a vacation and we’re going to try to heal our marriage. I wronged her, and then made a worse mess of things by trying to cover up. I’ve lost my niece because of it.” He stopped for a moment, and to Patrick’s horror, he realized the man was fighting tears. “I won’t let my wife give up on me.”
“You lost your niece?” Patrick felt like he was missing something important here.
“I never should have asked her to help me take you down. I never would have if I hadn’t believed you and your buddy Max Zirinsky had leaked that old police arrest to the media. My wife was badly hurt by it and I wanted to blame somebody other than myself. Turns out I was wrong. Briana was convinced you hadn’t done it. She told me you were always doing the right thing, and you never laid a hand on her or acted with any impropriety.”
Briana had told him that? She’d lied again, but this time to protect Patrick’s reputation, not destroy it, or so it seemed. But he was so befuddled and confused he wasn’t even sure he was hearing right.
“So my niece started digging to find out who’d planted those lies. I told her and my wife the whole thing was faked. Briana lov-” Thomson’s voice wobbled with emotion and he stopped until he’d regained control. “She believed in me. She was grateful because we’d paid for her schooling and some other things. She gave me her loyalty.”
Patrick was still furious Briana had done what she’d done, but he could almost understand that kind of blind loyalty. There was a lot of it in his family.
“Well, she found out you’d had nothing to do with leaking the story, and she found out the incident really had happened and that I’d lied to her and my wife about it. She came to visit me last night and-” Once more he had to stop and regain control. “Well, she nailed me. Now my wife knows that I strayed badly all those years ago. I hope she can forgive me one day.”
“What did Briana say when she came over?” Patrick didn’t have a lot of pity for Thomson, and he was determined to hear all of it.
“Well, you must know. She said she was going to tell you everything. About what I’d done, and how she’d come here under false pretenses.”
“She didn’t get the opportunity,” Patrick said, wishing now that he’d at least given her a chance. But he’d been so blindsided, so angry. So hurt.
“My only consolation is that my plan failed. You didn’t attempt to compromise Briana in any way, so no harm done. Now I’ve got things in better perspective, I’m hoping to save my marriage and one day repair the rift with Briana. I’m finished with politics.”
Oh, no. Thomson was so wrong about the harm he’d caused. There had been harm. Patrick and Briana had suffered. Although Patrick was having a hard time sustaining his anger when it was clear that Thomson was being well-punished for his misconduct and lies.
“There’s a new gal out front,” Thomson said. “Briana quit her job, I suppose? Probably doesn’t want to work in a place where she’ll have to see me. Tell her I’ve resigned from council, will you? Maybe she’ll reconsider the job.”
“I don’t think she will,” Patrick said. One thing he was determined about. Briana Bliss was never going to be working for him again.