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Authors: Carla Neggers

Tags: #Detective and Mystery Stories, #General, #Romance, #Suspense Fiction, #Missing persons, #Suspense, #Fiction

Cold Pursuit (23 page)

BOOK: Cold Pursuit
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“My sister Marissa was almost killed two months ago,” Charlie said in a near whisper. “Jo saved her life. Special Agent Harper, I mean.”

Grit was very aware of the armed, ass-kicking federal agent standing next to him. “I haven’t heard about—”

“You wouldn’t,” Charlie said knowledgeably, then added, “Supposedly it was an accident. I don’t think so.”

“You’re not a detective, are you?”

“The Russian, though. That was flat-out murder.”

“Hang up. Go take your test and relax. Let people do their jobs. Got it?”

“Sure, sure. You’ll ask Myrtle?”

Charlie Neal hung up before Grit could answer. He flipped his cell phone shut and smiled innocently at the fed next to him. “All done.”

“I’m Deputy Special Agent in Charge Mark Francona,” the fed said. “Jo Harper’s boss. This is the building where she lives. Who are you?”

Grit could tell Francona already knew. “Her boyfriend.”

“Wrong.”

“I’m too cute for her?”

Francona waited.

“Ryan Taylor, sir.”

“You talked to some of my people earlier, Petty Officer Taylor.”

“I’ve been given an impossible mission.”

“You SEALs thrive on impossible missions.” Francona nodded to the ivy-covered brick building. “She has the ground-level apartment. She objects if anyone says it’s the basement. I guess there’s a difference. An old guy from her hometown stopped by to see her in the spring. They went and looked at the cherry blossoms together.”

“Must be something. The cherry blossoms.”

“You’ve never seen them?”

“No, sir. I arrived here after they’d bloomed.”

Francona’s expression tightened. “I’m sorry about your leg, Petty Officer Taylor. And I’m sorry about Petty Officer Ferrerra.” He spoke crisply, with sincerity but no pity. “I want to thank you for your service.”

“A privilege to serve, sir.” Grit had to work at keeping any sorrow and self-pity out of his voice. It’d be easier if his leg didn’t hurt. If Moose would quit bugging him. If Charlie Neal hadn’t called and Alexander Bruni hadn’t been killed and Myrtle was being straight with him. And if it wasn’t November in Washington. “Drew Cameron was the name of the old guy. But you know that, right?”

“He died two weeks later on a mountain in Vermont.”

“Ever been to Vermont?”

Irritation flickered across Francona’s face. “No.”

“Me, neither. I’m a Southern boy. My family makes the best tupelo honey—”

“Drew Cameron’s son Elijah is a decorated Green Beret. Master sergeant. He was almost killed in April.” A half beat’s pause for the fed’s eyes to narrow. “So were you.”

“He’s army. I’m navy.” Grit kept his voice even. “We did some stuff together. Went through a bad night together. That’s it. It’s got nothing to do with why you and I are standing here.”

“You, Elijah Cameron and Special Agent Harper want to know if there’s a connection between the death of Elijah’s father in April and the hit-and-run that killed Alexander Bruni yesterday.”

“Is there?”

Francona didn’t answer, instead nodded to Harper’s apartment. “You’d think a Vermonter would have greenery in her window, wouldn’t you?” He glanced at Grit. “What’s Jo to Elijah Cameron?”

Jo this time. Not Special Agent Harper. “The girl who got away. He has amends to make to her. He knows it, and so does she.”

“Does she have amends to make to anyone?”

“Herself.”

“For not following him into the army,” Francona said.

“That’s in her file, or are you guessing?”

“I don’t guess. I also don’t believe anything happens because it’s meant to. I believe in cause and effect.”

“You wouldn’t want to tell me what went on with Marissa Neal two months ago, would you?” Grit knew it was the sort of statement that could get him thrown behind bars somewhere, but he didn’t care.

Francona regarded him through half-closed eyes. “People tell you things, don’t they, Petty Officer Taylor?”

“You’re not. I checked out Marissa on the Internet after I saw Special Agent Harper’s video. Think she would go to a movie with a sailor?”

Francona didn’t seem to consider that funny. “Going to tell me who called you just now?”

Grit figured Charlie wouldn’t make it through calculus class if he ratted him out, and he had a test to take. “No.”

“Stay in touch,” Francona said, and walked away.

 

 

Thirty minutes later, Grit met Myrtle at a popular restaurant near the White House. He sat across from her in a dark wood booth with comfortable red-cushioned seats. She’d called right after Francona had left saying she had a hankering for crab cakes. She already had a glass of iced tea in front of her and had put in her order, but she clearly wasn’t in a good mood. “I’ve been turning over rocks all over town. You didn’t tell me Bruni’s stepdaughter is in the same town where Jo Harper is from,” she said. “Harper’s there now. Did you see her video?”

“Kid’s lucky she didn’t shoot him for real.”

“Is she in Vermont because of Bruni’s murder?”

“He was killed after she arrived.”

“If she’s undercover—”

“She’d have found an easier way to get sent home besides getting shot in the ass by a hundred airsoft pellets, never mind what she said about the veep’s kid.” He wasn’t getting into his or Elijah’s conversations with Charlie Neal. Myrtle was still a reporter, and Grit figured she was on a need-to-know basis.

She picked up her tea. It didn’t look as if it had alcohol in it, but Grit couldn’t know for sure. “Fair point,” she said, “but if there’s anything going on in Black Falls, Harper will run into it. She’s the type. She’s the one who got you involved in this?”

“I’ve never met her.”

There was a moment’s silence as Myrtle drank some of her tea and set the glass down as a waiter appeared. “What do you want to eat?” she asked Grit.

“Nothing.”

She looked at the waiter. “Bring him some crab cakes.” He retreated, obviously wanting to please Myrtle more than Grit, and she tapped two fingers on the table. “I can waste time scratching the itch, Grit, or you can just tell me. Who has you looking into the death of a prominent ambassador?”

He thought of about twenty things he could to do shut her up, then said, “A friend of mine. You’re going to want a name, aren’t you?”

“Not ‘going to.’ Do.”

Grit debated. He didn’t need Myrtle spinning her wheels figuring out Elijah’s name. “Elijah Cameron. This is off the record.”

“What’ll he do if I print his name, hunt me down?”

It was Grit’s turn to be silent.

Myrtle sighed. “You guys. Harper and Cameron?”

“Love-hate thing since preschool.”

“Yin-yang. Okay. Anything going on up there?”

“Alex Bruni’s stepdaughter took off into the mountains after she learned about her stepfather’s death.”

“I don’t like that,” Myrtle said.

“You got kids?”

“Why are you asking, Grit?”

“I just wondered if you and the dead Russian in London got it on—”

“You bastard.” She didn’t raise her voice. “I’m a split second from throwing my drink in your face.”

“Question asked and answered. Want to tell me about him?”

“No.”

“He had enemies?”

Her crab cakes arrived. Grit’s would be a minute. Myrtle dug in, ignoring him.

He settled back against the comfortable booth. “We all have enemies, Myrtle, but not all of us have enemies willing to hire assassins to poison our soup.”

“It was his toothpaste,” she said. “The poison was in his toothpaste.”

“He didn’t notice?”

“He didn’t have a chance. It was a fast death.” She snapped her fingers. “Just like that. I don’t know what kind of poison. Getting anything out of the Brits is next to impossible.”

Grit considered a half-dozen options for a fast death by poisoned toothpaste. Most were ones Myrtle probably had considered herself by now. “So your interest in Bruni’s murder isn’t professional.”

“No, Grit. It’s not. I don’t give a flying rip if I ever write this story or get paid for uncovering whoever these assassins are. I’m freelancing these days. I don’t answer to anyone but myself. If there are paid killers out there, I want them found. That’s it. Then I’m done.”

The waiter brought Grit’s crab cakes. He wasn’t hungry, but Myrtle stuck her fork out at him and told him to eat up.

He saw that she’d cleaned her plate. “Like those crab cakes, do you?”

“I didn’t even taste them.”

“You can have mine.”

She shook her head. “No. Eat. Your pants hang on your ass. You need to put on some weight.”

Grit knew he wasn’t getting out of there alive if he didn’t eat. He picked up his fork and had a bite. “Ever have tupelo honey, Myrtle?”

“Honey’s honey.”

“No, it isn’t. True tupelo honey is the only honey that doesn’t crystallize. It’s produced from the tupelo gum tree that grows in the river swamps of northwest Florida.” He set down his fork. Half a crab cake would have to satisfy her. “Come on. Walk with me to the White House. Tell me what it was like when it was being built. You remember, right?”

“You’re a jerk, Grit.”

Moose materialized next to him and laughed.
“Old Myrtle’s got your number.”

Grit ignored him and walked out into the late-autumn gloom of Washington. He wanted to take off his fake leg and climb into bed with a fifth of scotch, but Myrtle paid their tab and joined him.

“Let’s go,” she said without looking at him.

Moose blew out a breath.
“She’s hurting in ways you don’t understand and don’t want to know.”

“Aren’t we all?”

Grit walked easily, his prosthetic giving him no trouble. Not that walking was the same as before that bad night in April. Not that anything was the same.

He stood with Myrtle at the tall, black-iron fence on Pennsylvania Avenue and looked out at the White House and its still lush green lawn. He thought about assassins and high-profile targets like Ambassador Alexander Bruni, and he remembered Elijah, covered in blood, those piercing blue eyes of his connecting with Grit’s just for an instant as he’d said, “If I don’t make it, tell Jo it wasn’t her fault.” He’d tied on his tourniquet. “Tell her I loved her.”

Jo Harper.

Definitely the girl who got away.

“The girl Cameron let get away,”
Moose said.

“Yeah,” Grit said. “Well. Those things happen.”

Myrtle looked at him, the lashes of her lavender eyes glistening with tears, but she said nothing.

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty

 

 

Elijah climbed over an old stone wall that early farmers had built when they’d cleared the land to till, and thrashed through a thirty-yard strip of woods to the pond by the Whittaker guesthouse. No cars were parked in the small turnaround, but he’d driven past it and left his truck around a curve just down the road.

Best not to draw attention to his presence, given what he had in mind.

The mallards weren’t on the still, gray water. Elijah supposed they could have headed south.

He hadn’t been home for a full winter in Vermont in a lot of years. He used to dream about snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, working on his house, reading by the fire. Now that he was healed, he had options available to him, in and out of the military, that used his particular skills.

His family had ideas about what he should do. A.J. had invited him to work at the lodge. All four siblings were owners, but A.J. had always handled the day-to-day operations. Black Falls Lodge was his baby.

Rose wanted him to train a search dog.

Sean wanted him out in California—that was where the money was, he’d said.

None of his options would matter, Elijah thought, if he spent a chunk of the coming winter in jail awaiting trial for breaking and entering.

His cell phone vibrated. He checked the readout, and answered.

“Where are you?” Grit asked.

“Looking at ducks and avoiding arrest. You?”

“White House. I wasn’t invited in.”

“Just a matter of time.”

“Charlie has my phone number,” Grit said bluntly. “Jo’s boss is on high alert. Myrtle’s Russian lover had his toothpaste poisoned. And Jo saved Marissa Neal’s life two months ago. Hang on.”

Elijah gripped the phone, impatient.

Grit was back. “It occurred to me the Secret Service agents on the other side of the fence read my lips when I said M-a-r-i-” Grit started to spell out Marissa’s name.

Elijah cut him off. “If you get locked up, Grit, let’s see if we can share a jail cell. I’ll bring paper, and we can write a book on what not to do after you get chewed up in battle. How did Jo save Charlie’s big sister?”

“She and friends borrowed a cottage in the Shenandoah Mountains for a weekend getaway. Marissa is a history teacher at Charlie’s private school, by the way.”

“What happened at the cottage?” Elijah asked.

“The gas stove blew up. Our Jo dived into the flames, basically, although she wasn’t burned, and saved Marissa from certain maiming or even death. Risked her life.”

“Was Charlie there?”

“No.”

“Is the incident under investigation?”

“You know, I’m brave, honorable and true, but I don’t walk up to Secret Service agents and ask them if an unreported fire I’m not supposed to know about that nearly killed the eldest daughter of the vice president is under investigation.”

“You SEALs are just so damn smart.”

“We’re missing something,” Grit said.

“Yes—”

Grit had already hung up.

Elijah tried the front door of the guesthouse and wasn’t surprised to find it unlocked. A small entry with a cold slate floor had a door to the left and a door to the right. He tried both. One was locked, one wasn’t. He’d bet real money that the teenager with the romantic view of Vermont had left her door unlocked and the humorless meat her father had hired to look for her had locked his.

An unlocked door wasn’t a defense against a charge of breaking and entering, but Elijah figured Nora would either never know or never press charges.

Either way, he went in.

The apartment was decorated with cottage-style furnishings in light green, brown, rust. He couldn’t remember if Vivian had said she’d done up the place, but since nothing looked cheap, either she had or Nora had received more financial help from her family than she’d let on. She’d added her own laptop, a flat-screen television and DVDs that included collections of Jane Austen PBS movies,
Dr. Who,
Steve McQueen and Humphrey Bogart. Elijah remembered Nora telling him that she wanted to major in film, but both parents were opposed, on the grounds that she’d only become another Hollywood failure.

BOOK: Cold Pursuit
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