It was a small victory and provided little comfort. The fact remained that Bonnie wasn’t there. And he wasn’t the only one who took note of her absence. The room was thick with reporters, although cameras were not allowed in. The media frenzy hadn’t lost any of its fervor.
The arraignment hearing wasn’t much more than a swift procedural stamp. Finn waited for his turn longer than he stood before the judge. No defense was offered during arraignment. It was all business. Charges were read, Finn pled not guilty, and an attorney was appointed to him. He would not be talking to the police from there on out, and his new, albeit temporary until he was extradited, attorney promised to meet with him later in the day. He would be brought to Missouri within the week unless he waived extradition. He wouldn’t be waiving it. What was the point?
“YOU HAVE A visitor.”
Finn wasn’t surprised. He’d been expecting his new lawyer. But he wasn’t led to an interview room. He was led down a long line of stools, sparsely populated by inmates who faced a glass partition and talked to their visitors through phones on the other side. His heart leaped in his throat, and he tamped down the urge to surge forward, expecting Bonnie to be waiting across the glass. Instead, her grandmother sat there, her elegant hand wrapped around the receiver of the phone, her mouth set in a thin line, waiting for him to pick up the receiver on his side and speak with her.
He considered refusing to see her. But his curiosity won out, and he slid onto the stool and grasped the phone in his manacled hands, holding it to his ear as he waited for her to speak. He didn’t ask for Bonnie, he didn’t ask her what she wanted. He just waited.
She considered him briefly and then said, “Aren’t you wondering why you’re still being charged, while Bonnie has been released?”
He didn’t respond.
“I mean, if you two were together . . . wouldn’t she be guilty too?”
Finn wasn’t sure what the purpose of this visit was, but Raena Shelby—Gran—obviously was. Gran didn’t fit her at all. Gran sounded like a woman with gray permed hair and little bifocals.
“Police believe you drew Bear in with promises to turn Bonnie over to him. And maybe you really did plan to exchange Bonnie for the cash. But Bonnie had pulled a fast one on you and escaped in your Blazer. Which is why you had to rent the car, which is why, when Bear showed up without the money, you shot him.”
“What money?” Finn broke his silence, incredulous.
“The $500,000 you demanded.”
Finn just stared, dumfounded once more.
“I withdrew the money two days before you shot Bear.” Raena Shelby was studying him as she spoke, as if gauging the effectiveness of her story.
“Why are you here?” Finn asked, his head spinning, his heart in his throat. He’d never asked for a damn dime.
She ignored him, continuing on like an attorney in cross examination.
“The reason you’re being charged, and Bonnie isn’t, is because the police have a very clear picture of what really happened. It’s not hard to figure out.” She paused, waiting to make sure he was hanging on her words. Her blue eyes were icy, and her hand tightened on the phone.
“You found Bonnie wandering around Boston. Suicidal and lost. And instead of taking her to a hospital or calling the police, you took her across the country.”
For the first time, Finn felt a twinge of guilt.
“You recognized her. You saw dollar signs. And you took her.” Raena Shelby’s eyes narrowed, and she sneered disdainfully. “There’s evidence that she tried to get away from you. She took your Blazer to escape, which is why you had to rent a car. And all of this was right around the time Bear was shot.”
Finn didn’t allow himself to respond. He gritted his teeth and waited her out, knowing it didn’t matter what he said to defend himself. She had written the narrative, and she was delivering her lines like a seasoned actress.
“There is also evidence that she is not mentally stable. Bonnie Rae isn’t well. She was diagnosed with bi-polar disorder. She’s supposed to be taking medicine. Did you know that Finn?” She asked the question curiously and said his first name like she was suddenly his friend.
Finn wanted to hang up the phone. He wanted to signal to the guard that he was done. He wanted to break the glass and strangle the self-satisfied woman who sat across from him, attempting to reduce the last week of his life—the best week of his life—to rubble.
“I thought for sure she was dead when I saw her hair strewn around the dressing room. She had a nervous breakdown. That’s what these last two weeks have been—one big nervous breakdown. She’s not well, Finn. You don’t really want a girl like that, do you? Oh, I can see how you might get distracted by her beauty. And her talent. And her money, most of all. She’s rich. That’s got to be irresistible to a man like you.”
A man like you. Irresistible. Finn fought the urge to throw up. Bonnie Rae was irresistible. What had he told her? You make me feel. And feeling that much is irresistible sometimes. You are irresistible sometimes.”
She shot a glance down at the ring he wore on his finger and met his eyes once more.
“She doesn’t want to see you. Now that she’s been released and has had some time to think, she just wants to put it all behind her. The marriage will be annulled, obviously. It’s being taken care of.”
She waited for him to respond, and when he didn’t, a flash of frustration tightened her lips.
“You thought you were being so smart, didn’t you? You thought marriage would save you.” Raena laughed, and Finn caught a brief hint of Bonnie’s wide, curving grin in her grandmother’s expression. But there was no sunshine or joy in the smile—making the resemblance shallow and false.