Out of Reach: A Novel (15 page)

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Authors: Patricia Lewin

Tags: #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers, #Crime

BOOK: Out of Reach: A Novel
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XIX

“I
S SHE CRAZY
?” Alec’s control snapped as he listened to Erin accuse Neville of holding Cody Sanders. “What the hell is she doing?”

The technician at his side looked up. “Sir?”

Alec shook his head, realizing he’d spoken aloud. “Never mind.”

He pulled in his anger, his frustration. Although it would serve him right to have rumors that he’d lost it running through the team. He had to have been crazy to go along with Erin’s scheme. Of course, she was going in whether he’d agreed or not, and there would have been no way to stop her. “Damn it,” he muttered, catching another nervous glance from the technician. “Is she leaving?”

“Sounds that way.”

It was about time. He needed her out of there before she could do more harm. Then he’d have to figure out a way to do damage control.

For a few minutes, they listened as Erin made her way across the crowded reception, with a word or comment to people as she passed. She was so damn calm, so unruffled, it nearly set him off again. Didn’t she realize what she’d done? She’d put Cody’s life in danger, and for what? If it was some damn ego thing, he’d find a way to bring her down. He didn’t care about her connections or whom she worked for.

Then everything got quiet, the only sound her heels against concrete.”I’m out,” she said, “heading for my car.”

“I’ll meet you there.”
And you’ll have a hell of a lot of explaining to do.
Alec removed the earphones. To the technician he said, “Make up a tape of everything here and send it over to the command post in Baltimore. Tell Agent Hart I’ll check in a couple of hours.” He started for the rear door.

“Agent Donovan?”

He looked back at the technician.

“What are we doing here, sir?”

Alec sighed. “I wish I knew.” He’d have some fast talking to do when this got back to headquarters. Meanwhile, he needed to find out just what Erin Baker was up to. With a nod to the technician, he climbed out of the van.

Outside, fall had staked its claim on the night. The temperature had dropped at least twenty degrees in the last couple of hours and the wind had begun to stir. Considering Alec felt ready to punch something, the coolness was a welcome respite.

Erin had sworn she was just going to talk to Neville. Well, she’d gone way beyond that. Alec wondered if she’d purposely lied to him, or whether she was just incompetent. No, one thing the woman wasn’t, was incompetent. Careless. Reckless. Crazy. But not incompetent.

He climbed into his car, parked two blocks from the van and a half block behind Erin’s car, and waited, watching for her in his rearview mirror. She came into sight shortly, a lone woman in a silky black slip of a dress and crazy high-heeled shoes.

How hard would it be to take her out?

With a nod, Neville could send someone after her. And it wouldn’t be a lightweight screwup like Al Beckwith. Neville would send someone who knew his way around troublemakers, and he’d need nothing more than his bare hands.

The thought had Alec loosening the .38 beneath his jacket.

No one approached her, however, as she passed him without acknowledging his presence and climbed into her car. She pulled away from the curb, and after giving her enough time to disappear in traffic, Alec followed.

They’d agreed to meet on the mall, Erin coming in from the west end near the Lincoln Memorial and Alec from the east and the Washington Memorial. After finding a parking spot, he made his way along the path skirting the reflecting pool, its dark water glassy in the moonlight.

She’d arrived first, but he didn’t recognize her right away. She’d covered the sleek dress with a belted all-weather coat and replaced the sexy heels with a pair of practical flats. She’d donned a pair of glasses and carried a slim briefcase, which sat near her feet. Relaxing on a bench across from the Korean War Veterans Memorial, she looked like any other federal employee after a particularly grueling day. As a disguise, it wasn’t foolproof, but it worked for the casual onlooker. Not many people would connect her with the sophisticated woman who’d just left the German Embassy.

He dropped down onto the bench beside her, his anger stirring again now that she was near. “Do you want to tell me what that was all about?”

“Neville’s involved.”

He snorted. “You have proof?”

She leaned over and pulled a file from the briefcase at her feet. “Read this.”

Using a small penlight, he spent the next ten minutes studying the three sheets inside the folder. The first was a detailed list of William Neville’s early business holdings in Thailand, Brazil, India, and Africa. It included purchase and sale dates of companies, locations, and primary products bought, sold, or produced. It was more detailed than the file Alec had pulled on the man and his dealings.

The second sheet was a summary of the major slave markets around the world: Brazil, Bolivia, India, Thailand, Africa. How slaves were obtained. How they were used. It hit Alec hard, coming at him from left field. It wasn’t a problem he’d ever thought much about, but according to this, it was serious and widespread.

The third sheet brought the first two together: William Neville and the slave market. Though the evidence was circumstantial, the connections were all there, pulled together by a brilliant analytical mind.

“Where did you get this?” The documents were unlabeled.

“The same place I got the information on Garth.” Then she seemed to understand Alec’s dilemma. “Look, Donovan, I have access to information you don’t, especially in the international arena.”

“Obviously.” He wasn’t going to ask again whom she worked for. If she decided to tell him, fine. Otherwise, he could make his own guess. The training, the years overseas, her access to information not even he could get to, and her familiarity with the diplomatic world, it all added up. She was CIA. He’d bet his life on it. He only hoped he hadn’t bet Cody’s as well.

“Okay, I understand why you think Neville’s involved, but there’s still no proof.” He needed more. Cody needed more than some analyst’s theories. “And nothing, really, to link him to the boy.”

She looked at him for the first time, her eyes filled with a dangerous glint that was unmistakable. “There’s the
Desert Sun
, the Magician, and a little girl named Suzie.”

For a moment, Alec didn’t respond. He understood her anger and frustration. All his instincts and experience, gathered over fifteen years with the Bureau and eight hunting child abductors as a CAC coordinator, told him there was a connection. That somehow William Neville was the key, the link that would lead them to the Magician and Cody Sanders. Neville, however, was a foreign diplomat, attached to the German Embassy, which gave him a certain amount of immunity. But even if that could be circumvented, there was a little thing called due process that neither he nor Erin Baker—no matter whom she worked for—could ignore.

“I wish that were enough,” he said, and meant it. “But it’s all conjecture, and it doesn’t explain why you put everything, including Cody, in danger by verbally attacking Neville.”

For a few long seconds more, she held his gaze, defiant. “It was a calculated risk, to learn if Neville was involved.”

His anger rose up, hot and furious, and he barely kept his voice down. “What right had you to make that call? There’s a young boy’s life at stake.”

“You don’t think I know that?” Her temper matched his, the memory of her sister’s loss haunting her eyes. “But we have nothing but guesses here.” She tapped the folder in Alec’s hand. “If Sam’s wrong, if
we’re
wrong about Neville, we’d be wasting time going after him. I pushed, purposely, to get a reaction from him.”

For a moment, he couldn’t speak, unable to believe she’d taken such a foolhardy risk, endangering not only Cody, but herself as well. Yet he couldn’t help but admire her logic, and her courage. “So did you?”

“Enough to
know
he’s involved. No doubt.”

She was always so sure of herself, so confident. He wondered if the CIA had given her that, or whether she’d possessed it when she came to them. Either way, time would render her either a hero or a screwup as far as Cody was concerned. Alec could only hope, and pray, she’d end up the hero. Meanwhile, she’d put things in motion he couldn’t stop, and he needed to deal with it.

“If Neville has Cody, he’ll move him now.”

“And we can watch him.”

Again silence fell between them. A few hundred feet away, the seven-foot-tall, stainless-steel soldiers of the triangular “field of service” that was the centerpiece of the Korean War Veterans Memorial, rose in soft illumination against the night sky. In a way, Alec would have rather fought in such a war than the one he currently waged. One where he knew the enemy, and the route to victory, though hard, was clear.

“So where does that leave us?” she asked.

Nowhere
.

To be honest, Alec admitted, there never should have been an
us
in this investigation. He’d taken a chance that this woman could help him find a child, and he didn’t know whether it had been the best decision he’d ever made or the worst. Not her fault. His. Now it was time—past time—she was out of it. He’d take her suggestion and make Neville his priority, but other than that, he needed to move on and attempt to find Cody Sanders without any more detours.

Before he could put words to the thought, however, she turned to him. “How do you do this?” she asked.

He glanced at her, not sure what she meant.

“How do you spend your life looking for lost children?” she clarified.

“Oh. That.” He sighed and leaned back against the hard wooden bench. “Sometimes, I’m not sure myself. But”—he shrugged—“someone has to do it.”

“But doesn’t it . . .” She hesitated, as if searching for the right word. “Doesn’t it eat you alive?”

He studied her, thinking of the sister she’d lost and his own thoughts about getting out of the CACU. “Yeah, it does.”

She turned away again, letting the silence settle between them for a few minutes, and he thought she was done with her questions. Then she said, “Did you always want to be an FBI agent?”

He laughed shortly and shifted again, drawing one leg up to fold over the other. “Actually, it was pretty near the top of things I did
not
want to do with my life.”

“Really?” She threw him another glance. “What was at the top of that list?”

“Cop. I was not going to be a cop.”

It was her turn to laugh, and he realized again that he liked the sound of it. “How come?” she asked.

“You really want to hear this?” He wondered what had sparked this sudden interest.

She nodded. “Tell me.”

So he did, because maybe they both needed a momentary distraction. “You see, I come from a whole family of cops. And it’s a big family. My dad and all three of his brothers were cops, and their dad before them. And of my five brothers, three are cops. Then there’s my sister, Emily, who’s the meanest one of the whole damn bunch.”

“I like her already.”

He grinned. “Yeah, you would.” He thought of his sister, the scrapper, who’d held her own against her six brothers. She and Erin Baker would be a dangerous combination. “She’d like you as well.” And he’d like to introduce them. If circumstances were different, if they’d met at another time, another place, he’d like nothing better than to take her home to his family. “Anyway, I swore I’d never be a cop.”

Erin shook her head, a bit sadly. “I can’t imagine having a family like that.”

“Let me tell you, it can be hell.” His smile broadened despite himself. He loved his family. No doubt. But sometimes they drove him crazy. “Or the best damn thing in the world. Depending on which day you ask me.”

“Okay. So you didn’t want to follow in your dad’s footsteps.”

“Nope. Not me. I wanted to be just about anything else.”

“So what happened?”

He looked at her, again gauging whether she really wanted to hear this.

“Go on,” she said.

“College happened. I was planning on majoring in math. I was going to be a teacher.” He laughed again, embarrassed. He didn’t like talking about himself. “Can you imagine me trying to corral a bunch of rugrats every day?”

She smiled. “Actually, I can.”

He skated right by that and went on with his story. “I had a roommate who talked me into taking a criminal psychology class. I needed an elective, and the rumor mill had it that the course was an easy A. Besides, I figured I’d been listening to this stuff all my life. How hard could it be? So I took it.”

“And you fell in love with it.”

“Nope. I absolutely hated it. I just barely squeaked by with a C, and I couldn’t for the life of me figure out why.” He reached up to shove the hair off his face. “It was the same old stuff I’d been listening to all my life. Though, I admitted that when my dad and uncles talked about the streets and the creatures who inhabited them, their descriptions were a bit cruder than those given to first-year psych majors.

“Anyway, I was really upset with that C. So I went and saw the professor, and he told me I had a bad attitude and knew a lot less than I thought I did. He said that if I’d paid attention, or read the book, I might have learned something.”

She laughed again.

“So I took the second course in the sequence, just to prove the SOB wrong.”

“And did you?”

“Not exactly. That’s when I pretty much discovered that there was a whole lot more to this than chasing down bad guys and throwing them in jail.” He paused, remembering his own youthful stubbornness and determination to avoid his father’s world. “I still had no intention of going into law enforcement, but by the time I finished school, I had enough credits for a minor in criminal psychology. Then I couldn’t find a teaching job.”

“Sounds like fate stepped in.”

He let out an abrupt laugh. “That’s one way to put it. That entire summer my dad kept harping at me to apply to the police academy. Until one night at the dinner table, when he wouldn’t let up, I told him I wasn’t applying for the police academy because I planned to take the entrance examination for the FBI.” The declaration had escaped that night, surprising him as much as anyone else at the table. “That shut him up.”

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