
“I’m so sorry,” she said, reaching out to touch my brow again.
“What’s your name?”
“Elana Love. What’s yours?”
“Paris Minton. Paris Minton.” The repetition was my attempt to extricate myself from the trouble in that room. But I wasn’t going anywhere, and neither was she.
“That’s a nice name.”
“How did you get back in here?” I asked.
“I never left,” she said. “When Leon came in I looked for a back door, but I didn’t see one, so I squeezed in behind the file cabinet and waited until he left. I was going to run out, but then that other man came in.”
“Why didn’t you say something?”
“I thought you might be mad that I didn’t help you against Leon.”
“Who is this Leon?”
“Leon Douglas. We used to see each other before they sent him to jail. He was in for armed robbery and attempted murder, but a lawyer got him out.”
“What did you do, cheat on him or something?”
“No,” she said in a flash of anger. “I broke it off with him before he robbed that store. I told him that no love was gonna make me live with a criminal.”
“Maybe he didn’t like that.”
“He thinks I have somethin’, but I don’t have it. I don’t, but he won’t believe me.”
“But Reverend Grove knows where it is?”
“How did you know about him?” She was suddenly wary. “Oh, yeah. I told you.”
“Does he?” I asked. For some reason talking made me feel better. I sat up.
“Does who?”
“Reverend Grove. Does he have what Leon wants?”
“Uh-uh,” she said, but I wasn’t sure that I believed her. “I told Leon that he did though. I was seein’ William for a while back there, and I thought he could help me against Leon. But when the church was gone I didn’t know what to do.”
Silence brought back the awareness of pain. I didn’t care about Grove or Leon either. I didn’t care what they were hiding or looking for.
