The Candidate (Romantic Suspense) (The Candidate Series) (22 page)

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Authors: Josie Brown

Tags: #mystery, #Contemporary Romance, #Romantic Suspense, #thriller mysteries, #romantic mysteries, #political mystery, #romantic mystery, #political thriller, #Romance, #Suspense, #Espionage, #espionage books, #Politics, #political satire, #action and adventure, #thriller, #Josie Brown

BOOK: The Candidate (Romantic Suspense) (The Candidate Series)
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Ben shrugged. “She went on ahead. I lost her.”

“Maybe she’ll find her way back if she hears you squealing like a piggy.” Slowly the man walked forward. 

Ben counted the steps—three…four…five…six…seven—until the killer was just two feet in front of the hole. Could he see it? Ben wondered.
Stall…just stall…
“Who are you? What do you want?”

The killer smirked. “Don’t play dumb. We know you’ve got the envelope. I can make this very painful for you—and for the bimbo. Go ahead and call to—”

His last word—
“her”
—echoed against the walls of the well as he fell to the bottom of it. Hearing the crunch of bone against brick drew Ben’s eyes downward.

There were no other sounds. 

When Ben looked up again, Abby was there, across from him, where the killer had once stood. “You…shoved him?”

“No. I gave him a sidekick. I have a black belt in kickboxing. Andy saw enough women get molested while he was in the service to insist I learn to protect myself.” She stared down into the well, but saw nothing through the darkness.

“Abby, what you did was foolish! If he’d heard you come up behind him, he might have shot you—” 

“If he’d heard me, you would have tried to save me. And maybe I’d be scolding you right now, instead of the other way around. Am I right?” She skirted around the hole and took Ben’s hand. “We still aren’t safe. The tables will turn again very soon, and you’ll once again get my undying thanks. Until then, we’d better keep moving. Venus is waiting for us right around the corner.” She nudged him forward. “I only wish we could have grabbed his gun before he fell.”  

He was thinking the exact same thing. Except he suspected that, of the two of them, she was a better shot. 

Chapter 47

 

Asquith Hall’s Venus de Milo was an exact replica of the original one, inside the Louvre. The center of the maze was also large enough to hold four benches, each facing the statue. 

The statue’s base was three-feet-square and made out of marble. Ben watched as Abby moved to the back of the statue. She crouched down beside the base’s ornate moulding and tapped it hard, in the center.

The moulding popped off, revealing a space about two feet wide but the same height as the moulding—a mere three inches. Abby slid her hand into the space. With a slight smile, she pulled out what they were looking for:

An unlabeled manila envelope.

But the pages inside the envelope contained some undecipherable code. However, Fred taped a tiny computer memory stick to one of them. 

“Fred must have the password to open the files on this thumb drive,” Abby murmured.

Ben nodded. “Halfway between here and DC, we’ll do as he instructed and find someone to call Langley from a pay phone.”

Abby shook her head. “We don’t need to implicate anyone else who they might gun down. I’ll make the call.”

“No can do. The Ghost Squad may be monitoring calls to his extension, which I presume means it’ll be put through some voice recognition software.”

 “Darlin’, you jaist don’t unnerstah-ann! Ah can disguise mah voice,” she answered, in a syrupy Southern accent. Then in her own voice, she added, “Whenever his constituents were around, Andy laid it on thick. I guess it rubbed off.”

He had to smile. “Okay, you’re hired. Let’s see if a phone booth still exists between here and DC.”

 

 

They found one outside of a gas station, where Routes 29 and 55 intersected. He punched in the number, then handed her the receiver, which she held between them, so that he could listen in on the conversation. 

Fred’s line seemed to ring forever before someone picked up. It was a woman. After Abby asked for Fred Hanover, they heard a series of clicks before someone else came on the line. This time it was a man. “You wish to talk to Mr. Hanover.”

“Yes, thank you,” Abby drawled sweetly.

“I’m sorry to be the one to inform you. Mr. Hanover died in an accident last night. His car skidded on some black ice, and jackknifed into the Potomac. They’re dragging the river now. If you care to leave your name and number I can have someone call you with updates—” 

Ben pulled the phone out of Abby’s hand and hung it up.

She slumped against the gas station’s cinderblock wall. “There must be someone else we can trust!”

Ben shook his head then stopped. Suddenly he grabbed the receiver and started dialing again. “Hey, Digits, it’s me. Fred’s dead, and I’ve got what he was looking for. At least, that’s what they told me at Langley. Can we meet?…No, I’m calling from a phone booth. Yes, it’s the same one….Oh, shit! I wasn’t thinking…Where? Okay I—”

He stared at the dead receiver in his hand.

“What just happened?” Abby asked.

“I may have compromised the one guy who can decipher this message on this thumb drive.”

She blinked away her tears. “So, now he won’t meet with us?”

“He will, but we just can’t walk into his place. And we’ve got to get out of here fast, in case the call was traced. In ten minutes, he’ll be calling a phone booth at a convenience store, a mile down the road.” 

“Isn’t he being a little paranoid?”

“He’s got every right. Like Andy and Maddy, his father was a victim of Talbot’s spy wars. Frankly, we couldn’t have a better go-to guy. Even as we were talking, Digits pulled our location via the GPS tracker he tethered to his Caller ID, so whoever got to Fred could do the same to us.” Ben looked over his shoulder. “All the more reason to get the hell out of here.” 

They walked back to the car in silence. He didn’t have to tell her what they both already knew:

Their chances of staying alive were dwindling.

Chapter 48

 

They both had their ears to the pay phone as Digits explained his plan, which was this: 

With cash only, they were to buy sun glasses, hats, scarves, jackets, magazines—whatever they needed in order to hide their faces from DC’s many security cams. 

Then they were to ditch the car in any free parking lot within walking distance to the Fort Totten Metro Rail Station. One would carry the thumb drive, while the other would hold onto the paper file. On the way to the station, they were to walk there on separate sides of the street, never acknowledging each other. 

In fact, they were to enter the station from different sides, and buy their tickets separately. Abby would jump on the Red Line, and Ben would get on the Green/Yellow line, both southbound. The lines hooked up again at the Gallery Plaza/Chinatown Station. 

“Why is he making us split up?” Abby asked.

“That’s in case we’re followed,” Ben supposed. “They’ll be looking for a man and a woman traveling together. If we separate and cover over our hair and eyes, they may not be able to ID us. And as it turns out, Fort Totten is the only station in which those three metro lines converge. If either of us picks up a tail, it’ll be easier to lose them in there. As for Gallery Plaza, both the lines he suggested stop there as well, so eventually we end up in the same place.”

Digits’s directions then explained that they were to find the panhandling violinist who played in Gallery Plaza’s ticketing lobby. If he played
Waltzing Matilda
, they should keep walking, and swap their train lines—he’d then jump on the Blue, while Abby would ride the Orange line—back to the direction they just came from, hook up again at L’Enfant, and get the hell out of dodge. However, if the violinist was playing
The Shadow of Your Smile
, Maddy should reach into the tip hat and leave a five dollar bill, and at the same time she’d pull out the tiny folded orange note, which would contain the directions to Digits’s place. 

If all went well, they were to rendezvous outside, across the street at the all night diner, taking the booth next to the back exit.

Should for any reason they get separated or feel they were being followed, they were to stay on the train beyond Gallery Place, to Metro Center, where they’d have the best chance of losing the tail, since it was the largest stop and serviced all four Metro lines. After losing their tail, they were to meet up again on the rooftop of the Momiji Lounge, on H at Fifth. A waitress named Laurel would give them a small envelope. They were to tip her well.

“Looks like he’s thought of everything,” Abby murmured.

Ben frowned. “Let’s hope so. All our lives depend on it.”

 

 

The Metro ride was uneventful. Ben was wearing cheaters and a baseball cap. He had exchanged his overcoat for a leather bomber jacket he bought at a Goodwill store next door for ten bucks.

He was the first to come upon the violinist in the Foggy Bottom station. Noting a security camera, he stood off to one side and pretended to read a copy of the
Washington Post
, which he’d salvaged from a bench.

He should have waited for Abby at the diner, but he already felt guilty for having left her unaccompanied since Fort Totten. He prayed she would make an appearance soon.

Six very long minutes later her train pulled into the station. She had purchased a navy raincoat, and had draped a black scarf over her head and shoulders. Her hair was tucked under it, so that no one could detect the color. She sauntered slowly, as if she didn’t have a care in the world. When she reached the violinist, she stopped, as if entranced. When she dropped her five dollar bill, she bent slightly at the knee, which allowed her hand to disappear in the big bowler tip hat. He didn’t see her pocket a note, but she put her hand in her pocket, so he guessed she had been successful. 

Their eyes met for only a second. It seemed as though he’d learned to read the faintest glimmer of hope or shadow of fear that crossed her face. 

He could tell she was feeling triumphant.

Ben waited a good five minutes after she was out of the station and had entered the diner before following her in.

It would be hard to keep from hugging her and never letting her go again, but he contained himself. In time, maybe she’d realize what she meant to him.

If they lived that long.

 

 

 “Well, well, well, talk about the new year starting off with a bang.” Digits’s declaration was accompanied by a frown and a low whistle.

“Why? What are you looking at?”

“The biggest political hoax of all time.” Digits looked up from his computer screen, where the file contained on the thumb drive was visible. 

The directions on the orange note led Ben and Abby to a Chinese restaurant, where, as instructed, they ordered pot stickers, broccoli beef, and shrimp chow fun. With their order they were given a key. Further instructions, included in the bag, led them to an alley in back of the restaurant. 

The key opened the back door. They took the rickety elevator to the fourth floor.

It opened up to a hallway containing just one door.

“Delivery,” Abby shouted.

 “About damn time,” Digits said, as he opened the door. “Did they give you extra sweet and sour sauce?”

Abby didn’t know what to say, but Ben did. “We’re starved, so this better be for us.”

Digits let them in. The room was immense. It took up the whole floor over the restaurant, but was also practically empty, except for a desk, a counter with a hot plate, a refrigerator, and a futon.  The only light came from a dim desk lamp beside a laptop. Blackout curtains lined the windows that were on every side of the room.

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