"You'd be surprised," he said. "And don't get mad. You can't really tell. But I'm sorry. No offense meant."
The hand went back to her thigh. She put hers over it again. "None taken. But maybe it would be better if you'd just drive."
"Here we are."
"Pretty dark," Gina said. "Except look up there."
"Where?"
"That top front window. Bethany Robley. The eyewitness. Her light's still on, which means she's up and doing homework. Damn. I forgot all about her. What if she sees us?"
"You're Stuart's lawyer and I'm his old friend. No problem. Hey"-Jedd squeezed her thigh-"we've come this far. You can't chicken out now. Well, you could, but it wouldn't be fair. Besides, no guts, no glory."
She hesitated one last time, let out a heavy breath. "You're right." She squeezed his hand. "Are you ready?" "I am so ready," Jedd said.
Gina nodded. Gave him a last smile. "Me too. Let's go do this bad thing."
Jedd opened his door, slid out, and closed it quietly behind him.
Gina, her heart sledgehammering within her, her pulse an audible sound in her ears, immediately pushed the button to lock all the car's doors and reached across to Jedd's visor, where he had attached his garage door opener. She pushed on the bar of it, her eyes on the Gormans' garage door off to her right, but nothing happened.
God, she thought, what if he hadn't parked close enough? Sometimes she had to get right to the front of her own automatic entrance at her condo before the gate would swing open. The signal on these things tended not to be too strong. She should have had him park in the driveway. But, stupid her, she hadn't figured out a way to ask without giving herself away.
Jedd was directly behind the car now, coming around.
There was no light in the car, but when Conley had opened his door, Gina had seen the three buttons up by the rearview mirror. Now she reached up, found and pressed the first one, on her far left. "Okay," she said. "Open up." Her eyes were glued to the garage door.
But it didn't move.
The second button. She pushed and held it for a long three-count. "Please please please." Nothing.
No longer aware of where Jedd had gotten to, she pressed the third button. "Come on," she whispered urgently, "come on." But nothing happened.
Oh God! Don't let me be wrong. I can't be wrong.
And then, right at her ear, a knock at her window. Jedd standing there, leaning over, looking in, a mild questioning look on his features. Gina whirled back to face him, made an elaborate shrugging motion, as if she didn't understand exactly what was happening. The car's door had locked somehow and she couldn't get them open. She shrugged again. He tried the outside handle.
He was reaching into his pocket for his keys. He'd open the door in seconds.
She turned back toward the front, hitting his garage door opener's bar and all three buttons again in quick succession, and got the same result. Nothing.
And then suddenly, at her window, another sound, this time much louder than the polite knock on the glass. A slam. Conley's flat palm up against her window. She looked out and up and saw his face, understanding now what she must be doing, and in a desperate fury. His palm slammed on the window again.
But still maintaining some kind of control. "Gina! Gina, open up! What are you doing?"
His keys were out now. He was trying to fit them into the lock below the door's handle. Gina reached to her side and covered the pop-up locking button with her hand. As Conley turned the key outside, she pushed the button back down on the door. He tried again, and again she kept the door locked, but she could not keep this up for too much longer.
Jedd wasn't about to fight that battle either. He backed up a step and pushed at his key and Gina heard the distinctive "clunk" as all of the car's locks, except the useless one she was trying to hold down, popped up.
He was opening the passenger side back door, right behind her. "Gina, goddammit!"
The glove compartment!
Reaching down, praying that Jedd wasn't one of the few paranoid souls who lived with his glove box perennially locked, she found the handle and gave it a pull just as from behind her Conley's hands found the back of her shoulders, tried to get purchase around her throat.
She tried to scream, but the sound, to her horror, was already choked off.
Then he was coming over the center island between the seats, enough of him to get his power into what he was doing now. Gasping with the exertion, trying anything to save herself from his brute strength and determination, she reached out and scratched at his face, then threw an elbow that seemed to hit him in the throat.
And for an instant, his grip lessened.
It was her last and only chance. She fumbled blindly in the glove box as Jedd's left fist connected with the side of her head, slamming it against the window. She had her hand around something plastic and rectangular-another garage door opener-and as the second blow sent pinwheels of light through her field of vision, she managed to press the bar. And hold it.
Until another blow to the side of her head reduced her world to a sharp, searing pain, and then to darkness.
Thirty-seven
At Juhle's instructions, the two uniformed officers who'd helped him with the sting had delivered Jedd Conley up here to the tiny interrogation room on the fourth floor of the Hall of Justice. Now the state assemblyman from San Francisco had been in the room, handcuffed to the table, and alone, for most of the past hour and a half. Dealing with the ambulance and other issues, Juhle had remained at the crime scene out on Greenwich Street for the better part of the first hour, then had come back here to his desk in the homicide detail and caught up with most of another hour's worth of paperwork.
Checking the clock on the wall, seeing it was now 12:45 a.m., Juhle knew that he had delayed long enough. He had to start his interrogation of Jedd Conley before too long. But he had some serious problems.
Critically, the provenance of the all-important garage door opener was unproveable. Trying to get Stuart off on his murder
charge, Gina could have bought the damn thing at Home Depot and easily, with her access to Stuart's house, have set it to the frequency that would open the garage door. She could have carried it with her over there tonight in her purse.
Now, with Conley's brutal assault on Gina, Juhle had grounds for much more than a simple and general discussion with the assemblyman. But time was running out, and with all of Conley's powerful connections, Juhle felt great trepidation that if he let him walk out of here tonight without confessing to Caryn Dryden's murder, and maybe even Kelley Rusnak's, he'd never get his hands on him again.
He couldn't let that happen.
At last, he went to the control room to make sure that both the audio and video feeds were running, then knocked on the door and opened it up, talking as he entered. "Sorry to have kept you," he said breezily. "Lots of stuff to take care of back at the scene. I got a little hung up. How you doin'?"
"How am I doing? What is that, some kind of a joke?" His suspect, his face scratched from fingernails and now swollen at his jaw-line and around his eyes, held up the handcuffs. "I'm exhausted. I'm hurt. I'm ready to go home. It's intolerable that I should be kept in here like this for all this time. I won't have it."
"Well," Juhle said. "I'm afraid some of that's out of my control. At least I can take off your handcuffs. The patrolmen tell me that you got picked up in the act of assaulting a woman. I find that hard to believe. Did the officers Mirandize you on the way down here?"
"What for? This whole thing is ridiculous. Look at my face. She was trying to kill me. It was self-defense."
Juhle remained calm. "I figured it must be something like that. But in the meanwhile, you're a lawyer, aren't you? You know the drill. I've got to tell you you're under arrest and read you your rights. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you do say can and will be used against you in a court of law. Do you understand this right?"