Leann Harris

Guarded Secrets


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       She gasped as she looked at the mess in her kitchen.

      Someone had been in here, searching for…what?

      Grabbing her purse, she looked for Jonathan Littledeer’s business card. She found it and dialed the number.

      “Littledeer.”

      “Detective, this is Lilly Burkstrom. I just walked into my house. It looks like my ex-husband’s apartment wasn’t the only place ransacked.”

      “Your house was broken into?”

      “Yes.”

      A crash from the bedroom made her gasp.

      “Lilly?”

      “I heard something crash.”

      “Get out. Go next door and call nine-one-one.”

      She turned and ran out the garage.

       LEANN HARRIS

      When Leann Harris was first introduced to her husband in college she knew she would never date the man. He was a graduate student getting a PhD in physics, and Leann had purposely taken a second year of biology in high school to avoid taking physics. So much for first impressions. They have been married thirty-eight years and still approach life from very different angles.

      After graduating from the University of Texas at Austin, Leann taught math and science to deaf high school students for a couple of years until the birth of her first child. When her youngest child started school, Leann decided to fulfill a lifelong dream and began writing.

      Leann presently lives in Dallas, Texas, with her husband. She is a founding member and former president of the Dallas Area Romance Writers. Guarded Secrets is her second novel for Steeple Hill Books. Visit her Web site, www.leannharris.com.

       Guarded Secrets

       Leann Harris

      God is our refuge and strength,

       an ever-present help in trouble.

      — Psalms 46:1

      Jennifer, DQ, Daniel and Crystal—

       each of you is a blessing.

      CONTENTS

       CHAPTER ONE

       CHAPTER TWO

       CHAPTER THREE

       CHAPTER FOUR

       CHAPTER FIVE

       CHAPTER SIX

       CHAPTER SEVEN

       CHAPTER EIGHT

       CHAPTER NINE

       CHAPTER TEN

       CHAPTER ELEVEN

       CHAPTER TWELVE

       CHAPTER THIRTEEN

       CHAPTER FOURTEEN

       EPILOGUE

       QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

       ONE

       T he door stood ajar, and panic raced through her veins. She’d locked her ex-husband’s apartment door after retrieving his clothes for the funeral.

      “Mom, did you forget to lock the door? You know Daddy always made me—” Tears clogged Penny’s throat.

      Lilly Burkstrom pulled her daughter into her arms.

      “I don’t understand, Mom,” Penny sobbed into her mother’s waist. “Why did Daddy have to die?”

      It was a question Lilly asked herself. Peter had been murdered in a convenience store robbery gone bad.

      It didn’t make much sense to her, a twenty-nine-year-old woman, so how could she expect her eight-year-old daughter to understand it?

      “I don’t know, sweetie. I know you miss him. I do, too.”

      Penny hugged her with a desperate intensity. “You won’t leave me, will you?” She looked up, her huge brown eyes glistening with tears.

      Lilly’s heart broke. She wiped the wetness from her daughter’s cheeks. “No, I won’t.” Although she and Peter had been divorced almost since Penny’s birth, they had come to terms with their failed marriage and had become friends. Peter’s recent salvation had changed all their lives. “I can take you home and do this by myself.”

      Penny wiped away her tears and stepped back. “I want to help.”

      Lilly pushed the door all the way open and peered inside. The condition of the apartment shocked her.

      Penny gasped. “Mom, what happened?”

      Lilly’s gaze swept the living room, dining room and kitchen. It looked as if a tornado had ripped through the place, throwing things everywhere. Chairs and end tables had been tossed on their sides. The sofa had been turned over, and the cushions ripped and thrown around the room. The kitchen cabinets stood open; boxes of cereal and spaghetti spilled out from the shelves. Broken dishes and glasses littered the countertops and floor.

      “I don’t know.” Three days ago, when she’d been inside this apartment to get one of Peter’s suits for the funeral, everything had been fine.

      “I wonder if Dad’s bedroom is this way.” Penny started down the short hall.

      A loud noise came from the bedroom.

      Penny froze. When she turned her head, her frightened gaze met Lilly’s.

      Lilly motioned for her daughter to come toward her. Penny turned and ran to her mother. Lilly rushed them out of the apartment and down the stairs. They retreated to Lilly’s car, and Lilly whipped out her cell phone.

      “Nine-one-one. What is your emergency?”

      “I need to report a burglary.”

      

      Detective Jonathan Littledeer greeted Lilly outside Peter’s apartment door.

      “Ms. Burkstrom, can you tell me what happened here?”

      She recognized the Albuquerque police detective and his partner, David Sandoval. They’d come and told her about Peter’s death. Had it only been two weeks since that happened? It seemed like it was yesterday when they announced the grim news.

      Stepping inside the apartment, Detective Littledeer stopped and scanned the area between the front door and the living room.

      “Someone did a job on this place,” Detective Sandoval murmured, walking around the living room.

      Detective Littledeer looked around the living room and kitchen. “It looks like they did a thorough search. What do you think they were looking for?”

      Detective Sandoval nodded. “Good question. I’ll take a look in the bedroom.” He disappeared into the bedroom.

      “Where’s your daughter?” Detective Littledeer asked Lilly, who was standing in the doorway.

      “She left with my cousin. She didn’t need to be here. It upset her.” Lilly had called her cousin Allison and asked her to come and pick Penny up. Allison was one of the few family members left in town after her parents moved to Florida. Alison had a child younger than Penny. They’d been friends all their lives, and Penny needed a friend to help her redirect her thoughts.

      Spying a digital picture frame on the floor, Lilly picked it up. “Peter bought this for Penny so she could see pictures of the two of them having fun.” She placed the frame on the coffee table.

      “Can you think of why anyone would do this to your ex-husband’s apartment?”