Part 40 (2/2)
”For fraud. For taking the lot of us.”
He looked toward the door. Something else pa.s.sed over his features. Turning, she saw that Jonathan had come out.
”b.l.o.o.d.y h.e.l.l!” he muttered, and took off running.
It must have been a moment of blind panic for him, for there was really nowhere to run. Or maybe there was. If he could have gotten down the hill and into the forest, he might have managed a real disappearance. But he didn't.
Jonathan Tavish could run. Seeing Thayer's intention, he came out with a startling flash of speed and athleticism. Thayer hadn't gone more than twenty yards before the constable tackled him. ”This is bulls.h.i.+t! Bulls.h.i.+t!” Thayer roared as the two scrambled on the ground.
Tavish was the stronger man, broader, and in better shape apparently. The scuffle didn't last long. Thayer was quickly cuffed. Dusty and disheveled, he was dragged to his feet.
As Jonathan led him toward the patrol car, he looked at Toni. ”I didn't do it! I don't know what kind of crazy proof there is against me, but I didn't do it. Toni, you've got to help me.”
”Tell it to the judge!” Jonathan muttered, shaking his head wearily.
”I need help, Toni!” Thayer called to her. ”Legal help. I swear, I'm not guilty!”
”We'll get you a lawyer!” she cried out. ”A solicitor... whatever you need!”
The arrest was not like on a cop show. Jonathan didn't protect his suspect's head and put him into the back. Instead he opened the pa.s.senger door of his vehicle and shoved Thayer in.
Thayer's eyes remained on Toni's, silently begging for help.
David, Kevin, Gina and Ryan were there then, aligned on either side of her. ”My G.o.d!” Gina breathed.
”Well, Constable Tavish said that we could get some of the money back,” Ryan said.
Toni spun on them. ”He says that he's innocent!”
David looked at her sadly. ”Toni, most people don't go around yelling out that they're guilty, you know.”
She shook her head. ”I believe him. And we've got to get to the bottom of this! He needs legal aid--whatever it is over here.”
”They have a fair and judicial legal system,” Kevin told her sympathetically.
”We should have never trusted an outsider,” Gina murmured.
”Right, he's my cousin, my fault,” Toni said angrily. ”What if he's innocent?”
”Toni!” Gina argued, but gently. ”They couldn't have arrested him without some kind of proof.”
”I want to know what proof!” she said. ”And I want him to have legal help, right away.”
”Well, that's just great,” Kevin said.
”Why?” Toni demanded.
”Because we're all broke!” he reminded her.
”Look,” David said calmly, ”we need to find Bruce. This is his place, and he always knows more than we do. We can get hold of his friend, Robert. He can tell us, I'm certain, what they really have on Thayer. Let's hop in the car and drive around until we find him.”
”Great,” Kevin said with a sigh. ”We're going to try to help the guy who screwed us all royally.”
”Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?” Toni demanded.
”We really need to put all this before Laird MacNiall,” Ryan said.
”Could he have ridden down to the village?” Gina wondered.
”I suppose you can ride anywhere around here,” Ryan answered. ”Hey, David and Kevin--you two take the minivan down to the village, ask if anyone has seen Bruce. Gina, Toni and I can hop in the car and try driving around these roads, cover the farm paths and all that.”
Toni backed away. ”Thank you,” she murmured. ”But I'll stay here, in case he's not in the village, and you miss him on the roads.”
”You're going to stay here? By yourself?” Gina asked her.
She shrugged. ”Eban is around somewhere.”
”Oh, great. Eban! That gives me a real sense of security for you!” Gina said.
Toni shook her head. ”It's all right. It's broad daylight. I'll be fine.”
”I don't like it,” David said.
”Oh, for the love of G.o.d, will you please go! If Bruce doesn't come back soon, or if you guys don't find him, I'll just hop on Wallace and come down to the village,” she said. ”Please, let's all move. I doubt if they'll be keeping Thayer in the village. They'll want to take him to a jail in one of the larger cities. We really need to move on this.”
”All right,” Gina said. ”But, Toni, you've got to accept the fact that he might have done it.”
She nodded, then backed away, toward the castle. But when both cars had started down the road, she walked resolutely toward the stables.
Entering, she noted Wallace in his stall, walking to the gate, expecting her to come and rub his nose.
”Sorry, boy!” she murmured, heading straight for the ladder. She climbed quickly to the rafters and looked around. A layer of hay covered the floor. She walked the planked surface, thinking this was foolish. She couldn't find something--whatever it was that brought Thayer up here--if she didn't know what she was looking for.
Then she heard whistling and stopped short. Eban. She listened as he strode into the stables, walking straight over to Wallace. ”He y'be, lad, yer special treat!”
He was feeding the horse something. But what?
It occurred to her then that the strange little man may well have been feeding the horse something that made him sick. After all, Shaunessy had never been taken in. But why would Eban do such a thing? To sabotage their efforts? Or maybe he thought, as Bruce had originally, that they were mocking Scottish history.
She held very still, listening.
”Ah, there, lad, aye, eat it all up!”
She forced herself not to move, not to breathe. She waited. Eventually, she heard him leave the stables. Even then, until the sound of his whistle was long gone, she waited. Then, in a fury, she began to kick the hay around, desperately...searching.
”You'll not get me on this!” Thayer told Jonathan. ”I didn't do it.”
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