Agent-in-Charge. Leigh Riker
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“You’re divorced, boy-o.”
“So she keeps reminding me.”
She laid a hand on his arm.
“You’re not responsible for her any longer.”
“So she told me.”
When he pulled his arm free, Jackie swiveled away to reach for the sugar, as if he’d rejected her, and Graham changed the subject again. It wasn’t comfortable for him, either, admitting his marriage had gone belly-up.
No sense jumping down Jackie’s throat again about Casey, when what she’d said was true. He needed Jackie to help him crack a difficult case, the reason they were sitting now in a diner several miles from the Hearthline complex to have a private conversation.
Graham’s personal life might be a mess, but he couldn’t afford to screw up this latest assignment. Casey’s well-being was one thing—and important to him. National security was another, and Graham returned to the business he shared with Jackie. Cloak-and-dagger, he thought. They were even “hiding” in a corner so as not to be overheard.
“Find anything new in those telephone logs or cell phone records?” He didn’t mention Hearthline by name.
“De nada,” Jackie answered, still with her profile to him. “Our guy is a real closemouthed type.”
“He’s careful, that’s for sure. I’ve been running the e-mail search myself.” The pen rapped the table edge again. “Nothing there, either. Hell, the breach has got to be someone in the agency.”
Jackie faced him again. “True, but weird.” Hearthline’s motto was “The Bastion of National Security.” “Selling secrets to Al-Hassan or any other terrorist network must be highly profitable—and it makes our guy on the inside a traitor.”
Graham frowned at his pen. Their mission hadn’t proved easy, not that he expected it to be. But locating the source of a major security leak before it triggered another terrorist attack on the U.S. was proving even more elusive than he’d thought.
“He’s there all right. I can feel it.” He rubbed the back of his neck. “What we don’t know is who he is.”
“I have a theory you might like,” Jackie murmured and Graham’s head shot up. She silently mouthed the name Eddie Lawton.
“The IT guy?” He’d fixed Graham’s computer once. A small, scrawny kid with big glasses, a stubborn cowlick and a pen protector in his pocket.
“He’s a techno geek, I know. That’s why he’s perfect. PC’s are his friends, better than people to him. He looks harmless, even cute—” Jackie shuddered “—but it would be first-grade easy for him to hack into the databases. Believe me.”
“Maybe so, but I still think it’s someone higher up.” Graham had been making a list right before he suggested they go for coffee to discuss matters. Before he’d reamed Jackie about the training exercise. Before she’d brought up Casey. “Much higher,” he said.
Jackie saw his point. “You mean, someone privy to real information as it comes in.”
Like DeLucci. The thought of their boss soured Graham’s stomach.
“Right, and with the alert at highest level—”
“‘Rumor has it another disaster on a massive scale is all but imminent.’” She quoted their supervisor’s latest memo. “Thanks to whoever-the-hell-it-is we’re looking for. High or low.” She stirred the sugar into her coffee. “Whoever it is, we’ll find a slip or a name somewhere in those records—and then a face to go with it.”
Graham set his cup aside. “We’d better get started.”
“I have more cell phone calls to wade through before quitting time.” She leaned close to whisper, “And that’s our exciting life, 007. Sometimes I think the undercover drudgery at M-6 will kill me before a traitor’s bullet can.”
Graham pushed back in his seat. Their true affiliation was not with Hearthline, but with C.A.T., a top-secret, elite counterterrorist team funded in part, it was said, by the CIA.
“Listen.” He checked the narrow room again, finding no other patrons at the moment. “This diner is better than a ‘dedicated’ huddle room at the agency, but still, no exception. The walls could have ears, so watch it. Let’s go.”
Graham slipped his pen into his jacket. He wouldn’t dwell on the fact that his marriage may have gone bust because of his job. That he’d lost Casey, who found it hard to trust in the first place, precisely because he had been lying to her about who he was and what he did.
Yet one question had been teasing the edges of his mind ever since he’d gotten the call that Casey was hurt.
Graham paid for their coffee, ushered Jackie outside then posed the question. “Here’s another thing to chew on. What do you suppose she was doing at my office that day?”
And why had Casey been run down less than a block away, of all places in the nation’s capital?
Walking beside him to his car, Jackie shrugged. “She wanted to see you, obviously.”
Graham shook his head. “I had distinctly told her never to go there, but why in hell would someone want to hurt her?”
“Or try to kill her,” Jackie murmured.
Exactly. Graham’s blood chilled at the thought.
Like hell Casey was no longer his responsibility!
Until her assailant was caught, Graham, just like Sweet William, was there to stay.
He couldn’t stop the thought: And to keep her alive.
Chapter Three
“Tell me again. Everything that’s happened since you went to my office.”
Graham paced in front of Casey’s living room sofa where she sat with Willy at her feet. Every step Graham took carried his scent to her nostrils, made her pulse rise another notch.
“If we kick this around enough,” Graham insisted, “we may find a reason for the attacks on you.”
As he spoke, she tried even harder not to recall her last sight of his long, lean body, his dark hair and eyes, his high cheekbones. She didn’t need her eyesight to know he wasn’t wearing that surprising grin now.
Casey rested a hand on Willy’s warm shoulder and went through her story one more time. Her drive to Graham’s office—her last drive on her own—the elevator ride