In His Sights. Danica Winters
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The thought of his family made his core clench. He needed to be with them, especially after the death of their sister Trish, but he couldn’t bring himself to face them…not yet. For now it was so much easier to stare down corrupt businessmen, killers and thieves. They were people he could understand.
Jarrod motioned to the other guard. “Would you please run and get Mr. Jeffery a coffee?” He turned to his detainee. “You take cream and sugar?”
The man shook his head.
“Great,” Jarrod said, glancing back to the guard. “And grab him a pair of Gitmo’s finest. I’m feeling like a tan jumpsuit would be a good fit. It’s not quite as nice as the suit Mr. Jeffery has there, but it will get the job done.”
The agent gave him a tight nod and left the room as the detainee started to argue. Agent Arthur stepped closer to the man but stopped when Jarrod shot him a look.
Jarrod could remember the days when he had been a young, dumb newbie, just waiting to jump in and take control in every situation. Thankfully, he’d had his father to show him the ropes in STEALTH—and the man, though he had his fair share of faults, had been as patient as a saint. In moments like these, he reminded himself of his father’s words: The only thing you can do well without thinking is falling in love. The rest of the time you got to shut your mouth and pay attention.
“Now, Mr. Jeffery, do you know why you are here today?” he asked, taking a chair from the corner and moving it directly in front of his detainee.
“All I know is that I was visiting our company’s office in Washington, DC, when you and a bunch of fed clowns thought it was okay to come in and take me down like I was some kind of goddamned mob boss.” Daniel pointed at Jarrod, his actions aggressive and angry. He would need to calm the man down.
“I’m sorry you feel like it was an invasion of your professional life,” Jarrod said, trying to empathize. “I know you’re the boss and under a lot of public scrutiny.” He held Daniel’s eye. “It’s my goal to get you back home as quickly as I can. I’m your advocate. And perhaps we can even make this all work in your favor.”
The man sat in silence for a moment. “I appreciate that.” He stared daggers at Agent Arthur, who stood in the corner.
“Absolutely,” Jarrod said, even though he was struggling to keep his personal judgment of the man at bay. “So, according to what I’ve been told about your case, they believe you may have been selling state secrets to foreign governments—North Korea, to be exact. Is there any merit to their claims?” he said, careful to distance himself from the authorities.
Daniel gave him a look of complete disbelief. He opened his mouth and shut it a few times before finally speaking. “I…I don’t know about any of that. And I sure as hell didn’t sell anything to North Korea.” Strangely, his gaze kept slipping to Agent Arthur as though he feared the man.
“If that is the truth, then I think everything should go well here today.” Jarrod sat down in the chair across from Daniel. He put his knee between the man’s knees, just close enough to be inside of his personal space, but not so close as to make him clam up.
“So, you believe me?” Daniel asked.
He didn’t believe the guy any further than he could throw him, but he wasn’t there to be judge and jury—he was only there to find out exactly what this detainee knew. “Unless you give me a reason to mistrust you, I think we can be friends. I believe in the American system of justice—innocent until proven guilty.”
In reality, almost everyone who worked in law enforcement felt exactly the opposite. Everyone was guilty of something. Maybe not for the crime they were investigating, but there wasn’t a single soul out there who wasn’t guilty of some wrongdoing—and it was his job to find out exactly what.
The man let out a long exhale. “But what about him?” He paused, pointing in the direction of Arthur with his chin. “I wish I knew what you are doing here.” There was an odd strangled sound to Daniel’s tone.
“Don’t worry about him,” Jarrod said, waving him off.
“How do you work with all these meatheads and not lose your mind?”
Jarrod chuckled. “I know you met us on a crap day, but some of them aren’t so bad. I’m sure you’ve got employees at Heinrich and Kohl who are about the same way—duller than a butter knife.”
The man laughed, loosening up. “You know it. There are days where I swear some of my employees ate paint chips as kids.”
Good, he was establishing camaraderie.
“Any of those employees at H&K got it out for you?”
The man shrugged, staring down at the floor. “If you’re a giraffe, there’s always going to be hyenas nipping at your ankles.”
“You think any of these hyenas could be behind this leak?”
Agent Arthur shuffled his feet like he was growing bored with the interrogation. No doubt, he wanted to handle it differently, but Jarrod didn’t care. What he really wanted to do was send the rookie out, but the CIA had made it clear that he needed a guard with him at all times. They should’ve known by now that he could take care of himself, and yet that kind of hubris made him more like the rookie Arthur than he cared to admit.
Daniel looked over at the offending agent and then back to him, weighing them both in a glance. “There’s always someone gunning for me. I’m sure that whatever it is you think I did, it was done by someone else. I have no interest in implicating myself in some political nonsense. I already have more than enough to keep me busy.”
“You’re not hurting for money or resources?” Jarrod asked.
“No, I make a really good salary. Our stocks are running high, and the long-term forecast looks great.”
Though the man was nearly the picture of innocence, Jarrod didn’t buy everything Daniel was saying. The CIA wouldn’t have brought him here if Daniel didn’t have some strong motivation to sell secrets about his weaponry and government contracts.
“Let’s go back to this idea of your hyenas,” Jarrod said. “Is there anyone you suspect might have set you up?”
Daniel looked torn, like there was something he wanted to say. He looked at Agent Arthur and then back to Jarrod. “For starters…” He stood up.
Agent Arthur took a step toward him, the action unnecessarily aggressive. “You need to sit down,” Agent Arthur ordered.
Daniel ignored the man, instead reaching in his pocket.
“Get your hands out of your pockets, now!” Agent Arthur roared.
“Agent, take a step back,” Jarrod said, trying to regain control. They didn’t need this getting out of hand when they were just starting to get somewhere.
Daniel pulled what looked like a pen from his pocket. As he moved, a picture fell down, drifting to the floor. The team must have frisked the man, and he had gone through a metal detector.
“Where did you get—” Jarrod started.
“Put