As she closed the closet door, Mrs. Ennis said calmly, “You may sit now, Detective. I don’t have the child, nor would I ever do that to her poor mother.”
Sufficiently chastised, D.D. shed her heavy winter coat and took a seat. Bobby was already munching on a Nilla wafer. D.D. eyed them. When her stomach did not flip-flop in protest, she reached out carefully. Simple foods such as crackers and dry cereal had been good to her thus far. She took several experimental bites, then decided she might be in luck, because now that she thought about it, she was starving.
“How long have you known Tessa Leoni?” D.D. asked.
Mrs. Ennis had taken a seat, clutching a mug of tea. Her eyes appeared red, as if she’d been crying earlier, but she seemed composed now. Ready to talk.
“I first met Tessa seven years ago, when she moved into the building. Across the hall, apartment 2D. Also a studio, though she changed to a one bedroom not long after Sophie was born.”
“You met her before Sophie was born?” D.D. asked.
“Yes. She was three, four months pregnant. Just this little thing with this little belly. I heard a crash and came out into the hallway. Tessa had been trying to carry a box filled with pots and pans up the stairs and it had broken on her. I offered to help, which she declined, but I picked up her chicken fryer anyway and that’s how it began.”
“You became friends?” D.D. clarified.
“I would have her over for dinner on occasion and she would return the favor. Two lone females in the building. It was nice to have some company.”
“And she was already pregnant?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“She talk much about the father?”
“She never mentioned him at all.”
“What about dating, social life, visits from her family?”
“No family. No boys either. She worked at a coffee shop, trying to save her money for the baby’s birth. It’s not an easy thing, expecting a baby all alone.”
“No male companionship?” D.D. pressed. “Maybe she went out late a couple of nights, hung out with friends …”
“She doesn’t have friends,” Mrs. Ennis said emphatically.
“She doesn’t have friends?” D.D. repeated.
“It’s not her way,” Mrs. Ennis said.
D.D. glanced over at Bobby, who also appeared intrigued by this news.
“What is her way?” D.D. asked at last.
“Independent. Private. Her baby mattered to her. From the beginning, that’s what Tessa talked about and that’s what she worked for. She understood being a single mother was going to be tough. Why, it was sitting here at this very table she came up with the idea to become a cop.”
“Really?” Bobby spoke up. “Why a trooper?”
“She was trying to plan ahead—she couldn’t very well support a child working in a coffee shop her whole life. So we started to discuss her options. She had a GED. She couldn’t see herself behind a desk, but some kind of job where she could do things, be active, appealed to her. My son had become a firefighter. We talked about that, and next thing I knew, Tessa had homed in on joining the police force. She looked up applications, did all sorts of research. Pay scale was good, she met the initial requirements. Then, of course, she found out about the Academy and the wind went out of her sails. That’s when I volunteered to babysit. Hadn’t even met little Sophie yet, but I said I’d take her. If Tessa could get that far into the recruitment process, I’d assist with childcare.”
D.D. was looking at Bobby. “How long’s the state Police Academy again?”
“Twenty-five weeks,” he supplied. “Live in dorms, only allowed home on the weekends. Not easy if you’re a solo parent.”
“I will have you know,” Mrs. Ennis said stiffly, “we all did just fine. Tessa completed her application before giving birth. She was accepted into the next recruitment class, when Sophie was nine months old. I know Tessa was nervous. I was, too. But it was also exciting.” The older woman’s eyes flashed. She considered D.D. “Are you a single woman? Have any children of your own? There’s something invigorating about embarking on a new chapter in your life, taking a risk that might provide a whole new future for you and your child.
“Tessa was always serious, but now she was dedicated. Diligent. She knew what she was up against, a single mother trying to become a police officer. But she also believed that becoming a state police trooper was the best shot she had for her and Sophie. She never wavered. And that woman, once she puts her mind to something …”
“Single, dedicated parent,” D.D. murmured.
“Very.”
“Loving?”
“Always!” Mrs. Ennis said emphatically.
“What about when she graduated from the Academy,” Bobby spoke up. “You come to cheer her on?”
“Even bought a new dress,” Mrs. Ennis confirmed.
“Anyone else there in her corner?”
“Just us girls.”
“She’d have to start on patrol right away,” Bobby continued. “Working the graveyard shift then coming home to a small child …”
“She had thought to put Sophie in daycare, but I wouldn’t hear of it. Sophie and I had done just fine during our Academy days. Easy enough for me to cross the hall and sleep on Tessa’s sofa instead of my own. Then when Sophie was awake, I’d bring her back over to my place until after lunch so Tessa could get some rest. It was hardly a bother to entertain Sophie for a few hours. Lord, that child … All smiles and giggles and kisses and hugs. We should all be so lucky to have a little Sophie in our lives.”
“Happy child?” D.D. asked.
“And funny and feisty. Beautiful little girl. ’Bout broke my heart when they moved away.”
“When was that?”
“When she met her husband, Brian. He swept both her and Sophie off their feet. Regular Prince Charming. Least Tessa deserved, after working so hard on her own. And Sophie, too. Every girl should have a chance to be Daddy’s Little Princess.”
“Did you like Brian Darby?” D.D. asked.
“Yes,” Mrs. Ennis stated, though her tone was noticeably more reserved.
“How did they meet?”
“Through the job, I believe. Brian was a friend of another trooper.”
D.D. looked at Bobby, who nodded and made the note.
“He spend much time here?”
Mrs. Ennis shook her head. “Too small; it was easier for them to go to his place. There was a spell when I didn’t see Tessa or Sophie too much. And I was happy for them, of course, of course. Though …” Mrs. Ennis sighed. “I don’t have grandkids of my own. Sophie, she’s like my own, and I miss her.”
“But you still help out?”
“When Brian ships out. Those couple of months I come over, spend the night with Sophie, just like the old days. In the morning, I get her off to school. I’m also listed as an emergency contact, because with Tessa’s job, she can’t always be immediately available. So snow days, maybe Sophie isn’t feeling too good. I handle those days. And it’s no bother. As I said, Sophie’s like my own.”
D.D. pursed her lips, regarded the elderly woman.
“How would you describe Trooper Leoni as a mother?” she asked.
“There isn’t anything she wouldn’t do for Sophie,” Mrs. Ennis replied immediately.
“Trooper Leoni ever drink?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Gotta be stressful, though. Working, then coming home to a child. Sounds to me she never had a moment to herself.”
“Never heard her complain,” Mrs. Ennis said stubbornly.
“Ever get a call just because Tessa’s having a bad day, could use a little break?”
“No, ma’am. If she wasn’t working, she wanted to be with her daughter. Sophie’s her world.”
“Until she met her husband.”
Mrs. Ennis was silent for a moment. “Honestly?”
“Honestly,” D.D. said.
“I think Tessa loved Brian because Sophie loved Bri
an. Because, at least in the beginning, Brian and Sophie got along so well.”
“In the beginning,” D.D. prodded.
The older woman sighed, looked down at her tea. “Marriage,” she said, a weight of emotion behind the word. “It always starts out so fresh.…” She sighed again. “I can’t tell you what goes on behind closed doors, of course.”
“But …” D.D. prodded again.
“Brian and Tessa and Sophie made one another happy in the beginning. Tessa would come home with stories of hikes and picnics and bike rides and cookouts, all the good stuff. They played well together.
“But marriage is more than playing. It also became Brian shipping out, and now Tessa’s in a house with a yard and the lawn mower is broken or the leaf blower is broken and she’s gotta figure it all out because he’s gone and she’s here and houses have to be taken care of, just like kids and dogs and state police jobs. I saw her … I saw her get frazzled more. Life with Brian home was better for her, I think. But life with Brian gone grew a lot harder. She had more to deal with, more to take care of, than when it had just been her and Sophie in a little one-bedroom apartment.”
D.D. nodded. She could see that. There was a reason she didn’t have a yard, a plant, or a goldfish.
“And for Brian?”
“Of course, he never confided in me,” Mrs. Ennis said.
“Of course.”
“But, from comments Tessa made … He worked when he shipped out. Twenty-four/seven, apparently, no days off. So when he came home, he didn’t always want to go straight to house chores or lawn tending or even child rearing.”
“He wanted to play,” D.D. stated.
“Man needed some time to relax. Tessa changed the schedule, so the first week he was home, I’d still come over to help Sophie in the mornings. But Brian didn’t like that either—said he couldn’t relax with me in the house. So we went back to the old routine. They were trying,” Mrs. Ennis spoke up earnestly. “But their schedules were tough. Tessa had to work when she had to work and she didn’t always come home when she was supposed to come home. Then Brian disappeared for sixty days, then reappeared for sixty days … I don’t think it was easy on either of them.”
“Ever hear them fight?” D.D. asked.
Mrs. Ennis studied her tea. “Not fight … I could feel the tension. Sophie sometimes … When Brian came home, she’d have a couple of days where she’d be unusually quiet. Then he’d leave again, and she’d perk up. A father who came and went, that’s not easy for a child to understand. And the stress of the household … kids can feel that.”
“He ever hit her?”
“Heavens no! And if I so much as suspected such a thing, I would’ve reported him myself.”
“To whom?” D.D. asked curiously.
“Tessa, of course.”
“He ever hit her?”
Mrs. Ennis hesitated. D.D. eyed the older woman with renewed interest.
“I don’t know,” the older woman said.
“You don’t know?”
“Sometimes, I noticed some bruising. Once or twice, not so long ago, Tessa seemed to limp. But when I asked her about it—she fell down the icy steps, had a minor accident snowshoeing. They’re an active family. Sometimes, active people get injured.”
“But not Sophie.”
“Not Sophie!” Mrs. Ennis said fiercely.
“Because you would’ve done something about that.”
For the first time, the woman’s mouth trembled. She looked away, and in that moment, D.D. could see the woman’s shame.
“You did suspect he was hitting her,” D.D. stated levelly. “You worried Tessa was being abused by her husband, and you did nothing about it.”
“Six, eight weeks ago … It was clear something had happened, she wasn’t moving well, but was also refusing to acknowledge it. I tried to bring it up.…”
“What did she say?”
“That she fell down the front steps. She’d forgotten to salt them, it was all her fault.…” Mrs. Ennis pursed her lips, clearly skeptical. “I couldn’t figure it out,” the older woman said at last. “Tessa’s a police officer. She’s had training, she carries a gun. I told myself, if she really needed help, she’d tell me. Or maybe another officer. She spends all day with the police. How could she not ask for help?”
Million dollar question, D.D. thought. She could tell from the look on Bobby’s face he thought the same. He leaned forward, caught Mrs. Ennis’s attention.
“Did Tessa ever mention Sophie’s biological father? Maybe he contacted her recently, showed interest in his child?”
Mrs. Ennis shook her head. “Tessa never spoke of him. I always assumed the man didn’t have any interest in being a father. He had a better offer, she said, and left it at that.”
“Tessa ever mention being worried about an arrest she’d made recently?”
Mrs. Ennis shook her head.
“What about trouble on the job, maybe with another trooper? Couldn’t have been easy to be the only female in the Framingham barracks.”
Again, Mrs. Ennis shook her head. “She never spoke of work. Least not to me. Tessa was proud of her job, though. I could see that, just watching her leave for patrol each night. Maybe she picked the state police because she thought it would help her child, but it helped her, too. A strong job for a strong woman.”
“You think she could’ve shot her husband?” D.D. asked bluntly.
Mrs. Ennis wouldn’t answer.
“What if he hurt her child?”
Mrs. Ennis looked up sharply. “Oh dear Lord. You can’t mean …” She covered her mouth with her hand. “You think Brian killed Sophie? You think she’s dead? But the Amber Alert … I thought she was just missing. Maybe run off because of the confusion …”
“What confusion?”
“The news said there was an incident. Left one dead. I thought maybe there was a break-in, a struggle. Maybe Sophie ran away, to be safe.”
“Who would break in?” D.D. asked.
“I don’t know. It’s Boston. Burglars, gangsters … These things happen.”
“There’s no sign of break-in,” D.D. said quietly, giving Mrs. Ennis time to let that news settle in. “Tessa has confessed to shooting her husband. What we’re trying to determine is what led up to that event, and what happened to Sophie.”
“Oh my Lord. Oh my … Oh my …” Mrs. Ennis’s hands moved from her mouth to her eyes. Already, she had started crying. “But I never thought … Even if Brian had … lost his temper a few times, I never suspected things had gotten so bad. I mean, he went away, right? If things had gotten so bad, why didn’t she and Sophie just leave him when he was away? I would’ve helped. Surely she knew that!”
“Excellent question,” D.D. agreed softly. “Why didn’t she and Sophie just leave once he’d shipped out?”
“Sophie ever talk much about school?” Bobby spoke up. “Did she seem happy there, or have any concerns?”
“Sophie loved school. First grade. Mrs. DiPace. She’d just started reading all the Junie B. Jones novels with a little help. I mean reading, just like that. She’s a bright child. And a good girl, too. I can … I can get you the principal’s name, teachers, I have the whole school list since I dropped her off half the time. Everyone only ever has wonderful things to say about her, and oh my, just …”
Mrs. Ennis was out of her seat, walking in a tight circle before she seemed to remember what she needed to do. She crossed to a little end table next to the sofa, opened the top drawer, and started pulling out information.
“What about after-school activities?” D.D. asked.
“They had an after-school art program. Every Monday. Sophie loved that.”
“Parents volunteer as part of that?” Bobby probed.
D.D. nodded, following his train of thought. Parents who they could grind through more background checks.
Mrs. Ennis returned to them, holding several pieces of paper—a school calendar, contact information for administrative per
sonnel, a phone tree of other parents to notify in the event of snow days.
“Can you think of anyone who might want to harm Sophie?” D.D. asked as gently as she could.
Mrs. Ennis shook her head, her face still stricken.
“If she ran away, can you think of where she’d hide?”
“In the tree,” Mrs. Ennis said immediately. “When she wanted time alone, she always climbed the big oak in the backyard. Tessa said she used to do the same thing as a child.”
Bobby and D.D. nodded. They had both studied the bare limbed tree. Six-year-old Sophie had not been perched among the branches.
“How do you get to the house?” D.D. thought to ask, as she and Bobby rose out of their chairs.
“The bus.”
“Has Sophie ever ridden it with you? Does she understand mass transit?”
“We have been on the bus. I don’t think she would know how.…” Mrs. Ennis paused, her dark eyes brightening. “But she does know her coins. The last few times we rode, she counted out the money. And she’s very adventurous. If she thought she needed to get on the bus for some reason, I could see her trying it alone.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Ennis. If you think of anything else …” D.D. handed the woman her card.
Bobby had opened the door. At the last moment, just as D.D. was exiting into the hall, Bobby turned back.
“You said another officer introduced Tessa and Brian. Do you remember who that was?”
“Oh, it was at a cookout.…” Mrs. Ennis paused, searched her memory banks. “Shane. That’s what Tessa called him. She’d gone to Shane’s house.”
Bobby thanked the woman, then followed D.D. down the stairs.
“Who’s Shane?” D.D. asked, the moment they were outside, puffing out frosty breaths of air and tugging on their gloves.
“I’m guessing Trooper Shane Lyons, out of the Framingham barracks.”
“The union rep!” D.D. stated.
“Yep. As well as the officer who made the initial call.”
“Then that’s who we’ll be interviewing next.” D.D. glanced at the distant horizon, noticed for the first time the rapidly fading daylight, and felt her heart sink. “Oh no. Bobby … It’s nearly dark!”