William actually laughed then, a single stunned sound torn from somewhere deeper than reason. “A timeout?”
Marsha shot him a look meant to silence. It no longer worked. Nothing about her worked anymore.
Detective Stark did not move. “A timeout with a padlock?”
“It’s an old latch. He panicked and overreacted.”
“Your son was dragged across the yard.”
“He throws himself down when he doesn’t get his way.”
“Your mother attempted to strike him while he was fleeing.”
“No, she—”
“We have video.”
The color drained from Marsha’s face so quickly it was almost elegant. For a second all her practiced certainty vanished. In its place came something rawer and more dangerous. Not remorse. Strategy.
“I want a lawyer,” she said.
Detective Stark nodded to one of the officers. “Take Mrs. Edwards in for questioning. If she declines to answer, process accordingly.”
As the officer approached, Marsha turned toward William and stepped close enough that only he could hear her whisper.
“You’ll regret this.”
William looked at her with a steadiness he had never before managed in marriage. “No,” he said. “You will.”