Devil's Due (6 page)

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Authors: Rachel Caine

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Suspense, #Women private investigators, #Fiction - Romance, #Romance, #Action & Adventure, #Romance: Modern, #Romance - Suspense, #Romance - General, #Private investigators, #Romantic suspense fiction

BOOK: Devil's Due
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“You’ve already had a meal with me today. This should
be Jazz’s evening with you. Besides, I’m boring dinner company.”

“Somehow, I doubt that.” He looked at her over the top of those glasses, and the blue eyes came as a shock. Again. “Come. I hear that Manny likes you well enough to allow you into the Inner Sanctum.”

She didn’t need much persuading, and that was a traitorous thing, a thing that disappointed her. “Fine,” she said. “Jazz is on her way there. I’ll stop off at home to change clothes.”

Which drew his eyes involuntarily down her body, and she felt it like a physical touch. He caught himself, and focused back on the files.

“Do you want a drink?”

“Sorry?”

“A drink?” She had no idea where that blurted offer had come from, but once it was out, she couldn’t back away from it.

His hands paused. He leaned on the desk, looking down. “Yes,” he said. “Got any Scotch?”

“Blended or single malt?”

“You’re kidding, right?”

“Single malt.”

“There is no other kind.”

“Follow me.”

She was acutely aware of him in the hallway, his warmth at her back as they passed the empty spaces. Jazz’s door was closed. Pansy Taylor, their assistant, was still there, sorting mail, her glossy dark head bent toward her desk. She glanced up, and Lucia caught a fast smile before she turned her attention back to her work.

Lucia shut the office door behind McCarthy and motioned him to the couch in the corner, near the window. He
settled. She opened the cabinet in the back and took out chunky crystal tumblers and a sealed bottle of Glenmorangie, then walked back over to sit in the chair next to the couch. She filled glasses, set the bottle aside and contemplated the russet-amber liquor for a few seconds before sipping. The taste was as warm as the color—a harsh bite that faded to a mellow, smoky glow in her mouth, then woke an answering fire in her stomach.

Neither of them had said a word, she realized, and it wasn’t an uncomfortable silence. More as if they were in perfect agreement about what a lovely moment it was, sipping single malt.

When his glass was dry, McCarthy said, “I can’t get used to the quiet. It’s never quiet in prison. Always some sound—footsteps, talking, things moving. Crying, sometimes. You can’t sleep deeply. Always waiting.” He held out his glass, and she mutely refilled it. “They thought they’d kill me, putting me in general population.”

“You survived.”

“Yeah.” His smile was weary and bitter and just a touch sad. “You do that, if you can. No matter what it takes.”

“Do you want me to ask what it took?”

“Just saying.” He rested his head against the leather back of the couch, watching her through contemplative, half-closed eyes. “You understand how I feel about the Cross Society, right?”

“I understand that you think they betrayed you.”

“No, it wasn’t that personal. They just stopped having a use for me, that was all. Look, you and Jazz, you got caught up with them. I understand that. So did I. I think you need to get out now, while you can. You get embedded too deeply…” He shrugged. “Consequences can be harsh.”

“I appreciate the warning, Ben.”

“Yeah, I’ll bet. So, you and Jazz. Good friends?”

“I like to think so.”

“This Borden guy, he good enough for her? Apart from being a Cross Society asshole?”

Lucia fought back a smile. “Oh, I think he’s very good for her. Good
enough?
That would depend on your point of view. What’s yours?”

“Older brother. I’d say father, but that’s just depressing.”

“And untrue. You’re only, what? Forty-four?”

“Just like the gun. And I get to say that two years in a row. Ain’t I lucky?”

She laughed and tossed back the rest of her drink. “I like you, Ben.” She meant it lightly, but his eyes flashed, and she felt something bloom hot inside. Insanely hot. Ridiculously so. One glass of whiskey wasn’t enough to make her feel like this. Not even one glass of Glenmorangie.

“Careful,” Ben murmured, and drank the last of his as well. “Men like me, fresh out of prison…only got three things on our minds.”

“Such as?”

“Food.”

“We had breakfast.”

He leaned forward and put the glass on the side table, next to the bottle of whiskey. “Finding a place to stay.”

“Lucky you, you have four of them.”

“You really want me to go on?” he asked. “Because the third one on the list wouldn’t be gentlemanly.”

“Can’t have that,” she agreed. “You’ve been a perfect gentleman so far.”

“You have no idea how hard that is.”

Lucia had a sudden, vivid image. No, not an image, really—a full sensory mirage. McCarthy moving her back to
her desk, sweeping the top of it clean. Her legs wrapping around him, their lips meeting and devouring. His hands…

She cleared her throat and stood up, aware that she was flushed, and not sure whether it was a product of the whiskey or her imagination. She reached for the glasses, and he was there ahead of her, handing them over.

Their fingers brushed, and it was like an electric current. The slow drag of his skin on hers made her pull in an involuntary breath, and she saw the answering response in the pupils of those blue eyes.

No
, she told herself sternly.
This is not you. You are not reckless and foolish. You hardly know a thing about this man, and for God’s sake, he just came out of prison
….

Which wasn’t necessarily a downside; ungovernable passions were terrifying and compelling at the same time. She wished she hadn’t thought of that. Gasoline on a brush fire, that thought.

She transferred the glasses to her other hand and reached past him for the bottle. Close enough that their chests touched, brushed. It would be easy to kiss, from that intimate distance. Easy to do a lot of things.

He didn’t move.

He didn’t move away, either.

“Excuse me,” she murmured, and looked into his eyes. Just for a second, and then her nerve failed and she turned and walked to the cabinet, where she put the Glenmorangie away and placed the crystal tumblers in the small bar sink. Her hands were shaking, ridiculous as that was; she’d been through firefights with less emotional reaction.

Lucia stayed with her back to him, facing the cabinet, head down, fighting against an unexpected tidal wave of longing that was threatening to drag her under.

“You okay?” His voice came from close behind her. She felt herself flinch.

“Fine,” she said. Her voice was, as always, calm and controlled. “I need to make a couple of calls. Would you mind…?”

“No. I’ll be in my office, going over my important work,” he said, with dry amusement in his voice. He knew. He damn well
knew
what kind of effect he was having on her, and he knew how much it was angering her to lose control.

She didn’t turn around. McCarthy walked away—she was acutely aware of the sound of his shoes on the carpet—and opened and closed the door. The deep breath she took in smelled faintly of him—the hair products they’d used on him at Lenora Ellen’s, an elegant cologne, an underlying crisp male scent that she was starting to understand was uniquely his own.

She went back to her desk and sat down, hands flat on the surface. The couch at the far end of the room was a nice tan leather, a match for the one in Jazz’s office. The walls were a cool, clean cream. Black-and-white, oversize photographs hung there, plus a selection of color photos that showed her in air force dress uniform, and receiving a civilian commendation from a former president. As much of her history as she wanted to officially remember these days.

She was contemplating the couch, and possibilities, when a knock came at the door and Pansy opened it wide enough to look in. She was a cute, efficient woman whom Jazz had hired—partly out of spite—away from James Borden’s law firm of Gabriel, Pike & Laskins. Her sleek dark pageboy framed a heart-shaped face that wouldn’t have looked out of place in a silent movie.

Even, just now, to the wide eyes.

“What?” Lucia asked. Pansy was hardly the wide-eyed
type. She’d been cool under fire, literally, when a sniper had taken out Jazz’s office window, and nearly Jazz herself. It took a lot to get a reaction from her.

For answer, Pansy held out a FedEx envelope—the stiff cardboard kind—and opened it to take out a red envelope. She held it in two fingers, carefully, as if it were a dead roach. “For you,” she said. “Do you want it, or do we make the shredder people happy?”

In Lucia’s experience, it was always better to make an informed choice. “I’ll take a look,” she said, and Pansy crossed the room with it and handed the crimson paper over. Lucia examined the outside of the envelope, but as usual there were no clues to the naked eye. A plain red envelope, like a greeting card. Her name block printed on the outside. “Who sent the FedEx?”

Pansy checked the label. “GP&L.”

“Not specifically from Borden or Laskins.”

“Nope. Mailroom. Could have been anybody.”

Lucia nodded and turned the envelope over. It was sealed. She took a sharp letter opener from her drawer and slit it carefully across the top.

She had just put the letter opener down when Pansy yelled, “Stop!”

She looked up. Pansy was staring down into the open FedEx envelope, and her face had taken on a death-white pallor.

“Don’t open it,” she said.

Chapter 5

“W
hat is it?” Lucia asked. She didn’t move a muscle, though her heart had accelerated into a fast, nervous rhythm.

Pansy looked pale enough to pass out, but her voice was steady. “Just put it down on the desk and step away. Now.”

It was too thin to be an explosive device, but there was something in Pansy’s voice that warned Lucia not to argue. She set the letter, carefully, in the center of her clean desk, and backed up. Pansy stepped forward and laid the FedEx envelope, with infinite care, down next to it.

“Outside,” she said.

“What is it?”

“Fine white powder grains in the FedEx envelope,” Pansy said. “I think they leaked out of the red envelope.”

Lucia was suddenly, acutely aware of her hands. Her fingertips. She rubbed them gently together and felt grit.

Oh, Christ
.

“Go,” she snapped, and held up her hands like a surgeon preparing to operate. “
Move
. Bathroom. You know the drill—scrub as hard as you can. Go, Pansy!”

“But you—”

“I’ll be there in a second. McCarthy!” She yelled it, full-throated. He emerged from his office, half-glasses still in place. “I need you to dial the phone,” she said. “I may be contaminated.”

The glasses came off. “Contaminated how?”

“Envelope,” she said. “Powder.” She struggled to keep cool on the outside; fear was strangling her, making her breaths shallow and fast. “Dial this number for me and put it on speakerphone.” She recited it from memory. He punched it in, short stabbing motions, and stepped back as it rang. And rang. And rang….

“Pansy?” Manny Glickman’s cautious voice.

“No, Manny, it’s Lucia,” she said. Absurd, how useless she felt, unable to use her hands; she was holding them in midair, acutely aware of the tingling in her fingertips. Imagination, most likely, but,
God
. “I need you to get over here with some kind of testing kit. We may have been exposed to something hazardous. A fine white powder in an envelope.”

Silence. A long one. She felt sweat beading on the back of her neck, under the thick fall of her hair.

“Have you called anyone else?” Manny asked. “FBI? Postal inspectors? The cops?”

“No. Just you. I want your opinion first.”

“How many people handled it?”

“Just Pansy and me. It’s FedEx.”

“Lucia, I understand you don’t want to jump to conclusions, but testing for anthrax isn’t instant. You let that
FedEx courier continue on his way, you could endanger hundreds of people. You need to call the FBI, right now. I’ll come, but you need to call. It’s probably nothing, but just in case. Report it.”

He was right. She hadn’t thought about the courier, and she should have. “I will,” she said. “Manny—”

“Did Pansy open the package?”

“Yes.”

“Ungloved.”

“Yes.”

“And you?”

“I opened the inner envelope.”

He hung up. She looked at McCarthy, who raised his eyebrows.

“You want me to find the number for the FBI?”

“Yes. Ask for Agent Rawlins. I know him.”

“Fine.” McCarthy locked eyes with her. “Go. Scrub.”

She did, elbowing through the bathroom door to find Pansy still at the sinks, scrubbing with handfuls of thick, milky soap. Lucia used her own elbow, to turn on the hot water—thanks to whatever industrial designer’s foresight had caused them to put in long-handled faucets—and began to do the same.

Pansy was crying. Not noisily, just silently leaking tears that trailed down her face and splashed into the roiling water in the sink.

“It’s going to be all right,” Lucia said. “We’re all right.”

Neither of them believed it, but Pansy gave her a shaky smile.

Lucia scrubbed until her hands felt raw.

 

When she and Pansy emerged from the bathroom, McCarthy was right outside, pacing. “FBI’s on the way,”
he said. “They’re getting to the FedEx driver and they’ve alerted the regional sorting center to back-trace. Agent Rawlins is sending a team, and Hazmat’s coming, but it’ll be a while. I told them about Manny. They’re okay with him working the scene, providing he’s careful and he leaves everything in situ.”

They would be, Lucia thought. Manny had an even higher credibility within the FBI than to the outside world.

“I got hold of the building maintenance people and shut down the air ducts. They’re finding the mailroom people and getting everybody together for testing.”

She nodded. It sounded as if he’d done everything she’d have done, plus a step or two more. Authority and decisiveness came naturally to him, even after two years of enforced subordination. She was shakily relieved; she liked being in command, but at this particular moment, it was good to have someone else there.

“Look, I know you’re worried, but chances are this isn’t anthrax or some other pathogen. Ninety-eight percent of these kinds of things turn out to be jokes. Carelessness. Somebody spilling their baby powder on the desk. You’re going to be okay.”

“I know.” She gave him a fast, reassuring smile. “Although I think my manicure is beyond saving. Did you lock down the office?”

“Yeah.” He held up the keys, which he’d evidently found in Pansy’s desk. “FBI will be here any minute.”

“Manny will be here first,” Pansy said. “Trust me.”

 

Pansy was right.

Manny arrived in just under fifteen minutes, dragging a wheeled case full of stuff. He was a big, unkempt man—not as unkempt and wild-eyed as he’d been when Lucia
first met him, but Manny was no one’s poster child for stability. He wore a black T-shirt with FORENSICS on the chest and a huge white fingerprint on the back. Obviously not standard issue from any agency, but probably as official as he had, these days. He’d trimmed his bushy hair recently, and the blue jeans he had on didn’t look too ancient. All in all, a much improved Manny Glickman.

A more focused one, as well. He mumbled a hello to Lucia, gave McCarthy a genuinely delighted smile and a handshake, and held Pansy off from a full-body hug with a warning gesture. “Clothes,” he said. “Off and in the bag.” He handed her a yellow plastic sack marked with a red biohazard symbol. “Put these on.” He’d brought blue jeans and a red sweater, as well as a pair of comfortable-looking flat black slippers and, in a separate plastic sack, what looked like underwear. “I got them from your place.”

She nodded.

“Everything in the bag, understand? Rings, watch, necklace, earrings. Underwear. Everything. Nothing that touched you stays on.”

Pansy’s eyes filled with tears for a second, and then she blinked and pasted on a grin and said, “You just want to get me out of my panties.” Before he could answer, she took the sack and pile of clothes and headed for the bathroom.

“Where is it?” he asked Lucia.

She nodded toward her office.

“I didn’t have any clothes for you, but I brought scrubs and booties.”

“Thank you,” she said gravely. “The FedEx envelope and the red envelope are on my desktop. No other papers there, thankfully.”

“Red envelope?” Manny raised his eyebrows.

“I slit it open, but Pansy stopped me before I could do more. I don’t suppose there’s a way we can take a look…?”

“What if there’s something in it to aerosolize the substance? Even a paper clip and a rubber band would be high-tech enough to spread a cloud of powder.”

That was a scary thought. She nodded mutely, took the scrubs and ducked into Jazz’s office to change. The scrubs—maroon—were far from what she’d think of as couture, but they served. Her clothes went into a plastic Hazmat bag, which McCarthy had prelabeled with GARZA in big block letters.

She hated the booties.

“Cute,” McCarthy said when she came out. She gave him an ill-tempered glare. “No, honestly. I’ve always had this nurse thing.”

“Shut it, McCarthy.”

“I’ve got this pain right—”

“You don’t want to know where you’re going to have a pain if you don’t shut up.”

He grinned. She perched next to him on the reception desk, bootied feet swinging aimlessly, pulse still driving fast. McCarthy’s attempts at humor were soothing, but not soothing enough.

Pansy reappeared from around the corner, Hazmat bag in hand. “Where’s Manny?” she asked. McCarthy nodded to the closed office door. “What do we do with these?”

McCarthy checked that the names were clear on each bag, and then bundled both into another, larger one. He labeled that one with both their names and the date. Evidence handling was something he was obviously just as good at as managing in a crisis. Lucia wished he’d let her do it, but could understand why he was keeping her exposures to a minimum. Still, waiting was hard. Her hands—
freshly scrubbed—felt cold. She rubbed them on her legs to warm them, saw McCarthy watching, and gave him a quick smile to show that there was nothing wrong, nothing at all; being exposed to a hazardous substance was an everyday occurrence.

The phone rang. It was Jazz.

“The FBI is there,” she said breathlessly. “Bastards aren’t letting us in the building. We’re downstairs.”

“I didn’t want you to come, Jazz,” Lucia said.

“Yeah, well, I came anyway. Borden, too. What do you want us to do?”

“Call Laskins, get him out of bed if you have to. Find out what GP&L sent us. Get them to fax over a copy of the text, if they sent it in the first place. I can’t get to the red letter to read it.”

“Which might be the point,” Jazz said.

“True.”

“Still…if the opposition could get to the envelope to doctor it, why not take the message? Why not replace it with one of their own and skip the anthrax scare? They have to know it would draw attention.”

“All good questions. I don’t know. I don’t even know that there was an original message in the first place. All I know is that there’s a FedEx envelope that came from GP&L’s mailroom.”

Jazz made a frustrated sound, like sandpaper rubbing stone. “But you’re all okay, right?”

“It takes up to seven days to manifest anthrax symptoms,” Lucia said. “Ask me in a week.”

Manny came out of the office. He was carrying a square black case that was sealed with more bright yellow tape.

“Hang on,” Lucia said to Jazz, and pressed the phone against her chest to muffle it. “Better get moving, Manny.
The FBI’s downstairs. They know you’re here, but if you want to avoid questions…” Which she knew he did. Manny would always choose to avoid questions.

His face was wet with sweat. “Yeah. I’d better get this sample back to the lab. Sooner I get the tests started, the sooner…”

She nodded. Manny paused, gazing at Pansy. She tried for a smile, and he looked as if he badly wanted to touch her, but neither of them managed to pull it off.

“See you,” he said, and headed for the stairs. Pansy’s gaze followed him. Lucia got back on the phone with Jazz.

“Manny’s coming out,” she said. “He’s got a sample of the powder. Maybe you can ride herd on him…?”

“Done,” Jazz said crisply, and hung up. That was Jazz: minimum talk, maximum effort.

“So,” McCarthy said. “What do we do now?”

“Anybody want coffee?”

 

It took hours. Not a surprise; Lucia was well accustomed to the pace of investigations. But it still rankled. She was tired, exhausted from adrenaline, and starving. To her disappointment, the FBI hadn’t exactly stormed the building. Agent Rawlins was present and accounted for, but he’d only brought one other agent and two technicians, one of whom was on loan from the Kansas City PD. One Hazmat suit, which none of them bothered to put on.

“So,” Rawlins said, and pulled up a chair next to Lucia as his men got to work. “Who’s out to kill you this week?”

“Agent Rawlins, you wound me.”

“Can’t say as I’d be the first, ma’am.”

“Cut the folksy bullshit.”

He had a lived-in face, too many lines for his young age, and the bright hair made him look tired. His dark brown
eyes didn’t give away much except his general intelligence. Rawlins liked to pretend he was a hayseed. Lucia knew better. The man had graduated top of his class from Quantico, had piled up a string of high-profile cases and was in the running to be moved up to D.C. on his next rotation. If ever a man was going to make it out of the FBI bush leagues, it was Agent Rawlins.

He nodded, rubbed his big hands together and looked down at the floor. “Want to tell me how this happened?”

She told him the facts, as briskly as possible.

“I won’t ask who has a grudge against you, because I know damn well that the list is about as long as the phone book. Including a couple dozen drug dealers and some very unhappy terrorists from the old days.” He looked up, directly into her eyes. “You know who the envelope’s from?”

“Gabriel, Pike & Laskins,” she said. “Our attorneys.”

“I’m the first to believe lawyers are evil, but why would they want to kill off their own clients?”

“I doubt they would. Anybody could have slipped an envelope into their FedEx bin at their offices. Wouldn’t be too difficult.”

“Good enough.” Rawlins nodded. “You get a lot of correspondence from these lawyers?”

She smiled thinly. “A fair amount, yes. Legal matters.”

“Mind if I take a look?”

“It’s privileged.”

“Miss Garza, you sound like a guilty party.”

“I sound like someone who understands how you work. You’re on a fishing expedition, Agent Rawlins.”

“Am I close to catching anything?”

“Not even a minnow.”

He smiled and looked away, toward the office door. His tech was coming out, holding a sealed bag marked EVI
DENCE, with the standard biohazard symbol on it. Rawlins gave him a thumbs-up and stood.

“The lab’s backed up,” he said. “Might take a few days to come back with a result on this. My advice—close down until we get back to you. Take vacation.”

“You’re checking the air handlers in the building?”

“We’re taking swabs. My guys are doing field tests, but just so you know, field tests aren’t that reliable. False positives in a lot of cases. The lab’s got some kind of growth medium it uses that can give us a determination in twenty-four hours.”

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