The Enforcer. Anna Perrin
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Last night, she’d been too rattled to ask Brent what he knew about Forrester. And even if she had, he hadn’t been in a communicative frame of mind after their conversation about Sanderson.
Hopefully, this morning they could start off fresh.
Because if he couldn’t help her decode Forrester’s cryptic words, someone would die.
“GOOD MORNING.”
Brent finished pouring coffee into a mug before turning from the counter.
Claire stood in the doorway, her dark blond hair falling in soft waves to her shoulders. Her green eyes looked clear and alert as if she’d been up for a while, and he wondered why it had taken her so long to emerge from the other bedroom. Was the prospect of his company so distasteful?
The thought bothered him more than it should have, which irked him further.
“That smells good,” she said, gesturing to the coffee.
“Help yourself.” He stalked over to the oak table on the far side of the kitchen. His job was to protect her, not fetch and carry for her. He might as well make that clear.
If she noticed his brusque tone, she gave no sign of it as she wandered over to the cupboards and checked through them.
“There’s sugar next to the stove,” he said, relenting. “But if you want cream, you’ll have to wait until we pick up groceries later.”
“That’s okay. I take mine black.”
After she’d filled a mug with coffee, she turned and leaned against the counter. “How well do you know Andy Forrester?”
After their disagreement over Forrester’s involvement in last night’s events, her question surprised him. “We’ve attended the same staff meetings, but I’ve never worked an assignment with him, if that’s what you’re asking.”
“Have you ever talked to him outside of work? Maybe gone out for a beer with him?”
“Nope, can’t say that I have.” He tipped his chair back against the wall. “In retrospect, I’m glad. If I’m going to be shot at, I’d rather it’s done by a stranger than a friend.”
Claire frowned, apparently disappointed with his answer.
“You think that’s a bad attitude?”
She shook her head. “I didn’t say that.” Her tone implied that he was getting his back up over nothing.
Maybe so, but it was hard for him not to feel defensive in the presence of a psychologist. “You’re the one he shared his deep, dark secrets with.”
She stared at her coffee. “He said only enough to alarm me. But he didn’t stay at Ridsdale long enough for a full psychological evaluation—”
“Psychological evaluations are a load of crap.”
She lifted an eyebrow. “And you know this because…?”
He smiled tightly. “We’re not here for you to question me.”
“Look, I’m sorry if you had a negative experience—”
The “negative experience” she alluded to had almost wrecked his life. But he had no intention of unloading his personal history to an FBI shrink.
“Nobody can know what Forrester is capable of just because of some boxes ticked yes on a questionnaire.”
“Is that how you think I evaluate patients?” she sputtered.
No doubt about it. This time, she was the one feeling defensive. That was a whole lot better than her believing they were buddies just because they’d escaped from her house together.
A muscle twitched in Claire’s jaw, but when she spoke her voice was calm. “I don’t use questionnaires. I ask whatever questions I think will give me an understanding of the patient.”
Nice recovery. He caught himself wondering if she ever lost control—and not just of her temper. Because something about her suggested she kept a lot more than anger bottled up inside her.
What would it take for her to let loose? He wanted to witness that explosion. Hell, he wanted to trigger it.
“I even tape our conversations,” she said, “so I can listen to them again later.”
“Is that legal?” he asked, goading her just because he felt like it.
“With my patient’s consent.” Her tone was still mild, but she set her mug on the counter with a solid thunk. “Wow, you really don’t like psychologists, do you?”
He folded his arms across his chest. “I’d have to tick the yes box on that one.”
She considered him for a long moment. Then her lips curved in a smile. “Well, at least you’re honest about it. Which is more than I can say for some people.”
Her words defused a little bit of his resentment, and he found himself wanting to smile back at her. He frowned instead.
She shifted uneasily. “If this assignment is a problem for you, maybe Gene could find somebody else—”
“How I feel about your profession won’t affect my ability to protect you. As I proved last night.”
“You saved my life,” she agreed. “Now I’m hoping you can do the same for Forrester’s other target.”
“How am I supposed to do that? You said you don’t know who it is.”
“The case I brought with me last night contains tapes of my sessions with Forrester.”
Brent gave a low whistle. “No wonder he came to your house. He wanted to get rid of you and your tapes.”
She flinched.
For a moment, he was sorry he’d been so blunt. He pushed the regret aside. He always called aspade a spade. Claire should get used to that about him. “I want to listen to them.”
She smiled faintly.
He racked his brain but couldn’t come up with anything amusing about her situation. “What am I missing?”
She shrugged. “After the way you dismissed psychologists and their methods, I wasn’t sure you’d be willing to help me.”
“Just what kind of help are you talking about?”
“I don’t understand certain terms Forrester used,” she admitted. “I’m hoping you will.”
Even though he knew it was a cheap shot, he couldn’t resist. “And I thought shrinks had all the