Liar's Key. Carla Neggers
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“Are you suggesting the FBI should get involved?”
“No.” Gordy rolled his left shoulder, as if to work out a muscle spasm. He breathed, shuddering. “I kinked up on the plane yesterday.”
“Are you sure you won’t sit down?”
“Yeah. I’m sure. You don’t know anything about these stolen ancient mosaics?”
Emma saw no reason not to be straight with him. “I haven’t heard a peep.” She sat down again. She wished she’d had him meet her in the conference room instead of her office. He would be taking in everything, from the way she’d unloaded the files onto the sofa to the tidiness of her desk and her choice of artwork—or lack thereof. “Where are you off to now?”
“No firm plans yet. It’s only Thursday. I don’t have to be in Maine until Saturday. Are you going to be at the open house?”
“I’ll stop in, yes.”
“When do you head up there?”
“Later today.” She didn’t elaborate on her plans. “You have my cell phone number. Let me know if you need anything while you’re in Maine.”
He leaned toward her, his gray eyes serious, his skin more ashen with the light from her desk lamp hitting his face. “Emma, do we have an active investigation involving stolen ancient mosaics? We meaning the Bureau.”
“You know I can’t answer that.”
A bit of color returned to his face. “Figured I’d try. What about your fiancé? Is he going to be at the open house?”
Gordy’s question took Emma by surprise, but she knew it shouldn’t have. He would have checked with his contacts for her latest news, and her engagement definitely fit under that heading. “We’ll see. Do you know him?”
“Of him. Colin Donovan. A rough-and-tough type. Good for you, Emma. Engaged to be married, wedding in a few weeks, member in good standing of an elite FBI unit. Quite a change from your days with the Sisters of the Joyful Heart, isn’t it?”
She noted the edge to his voice but made no comment.
“The paths started and abandoned in life,” he said. “Why didn’t you tell me you’d been a nun before you joined the FBI?”
“It wasn’t a secret. It was just something I didn’t talk about.”
“And you never reported directly to me,” he added, almost knocking over folders stacked on the arm of the sofa. “I only found out a few months ago. I had to hear it through the vine. You think Wendell would have said something. We were in touch when you were in the convent.”
“I doubt it was relevant.”
“I guess. You’ve never riled easily. Those years as a postulant and novice must have helped. It’s true Yank recruited you out of the convent?”
“Yes. I never professed my final vows.”
“Whatever that means. The Sisters of the Joyful Heart. I like that.” There wasn’t a hint of sarcasm in his tone. “They specialize in art education, preservation and conservation and have a beautiful convent on the Maine coast. Life could be worse.” He eyed her, as if he were trying to picture her as a nun. “Sister Emma.” He wrinkled up his face. “That’s a hard one to wrap my head around. Except Emma wasn’t your name as a nun, was it? Didn’t you have to take another name?”
“I was known as Brigid then.”
“Good Irish Catholic name.”
Emma inhaled deeply. “Anything else?”
He grinned. “I like the impatience. I’d have threatened to throw me out the window by now. Do the good sisters work on restoring ancient mosaics?”
“I don’t know. They primarily work on pieces that can be safely transported to the convent.”
“They don’t fly out to archaeological digs?”
“Not that I’m aware of.”
“Fair enough. Is Oliver York coming to the open house?”
Another blurt designed to throw her off her stride. “As I said, I’m not involved with the open house, up to and including the guest list.”
“But you’d know.”
She got to her feet. She wanted to maneuver Gordy out of the small confines of her office. He was fishing. He wasn’t even trying hard to hide it. She nodded toward the door. “Agent Yankowski’s office is straight ahead if you want to stop in on your way out.”
“That’s okay. Yank knows I’m here. He can poke his head out of his office if he wants to see me. He’s got work to do, and we didn’t part on the best terms. We never saw eye-to-eye on his idea for this team. I’m not convinced I was wrong but results speak for themselves. Water over the dam now. I’m retired. A dinosaur.” There was no self-pity in his tone. “I should get moving. I might go see the penguins at the aquarium, or I might skip the penguins and drive up to Maine in time to take old Wendell out for a pint.”
“I’m sure he’d like that,” Emma said, her tone neutral.
Gordy started past her but stopped abruptly. “I hoped you’d level with me, Emma.”
“That’s a two-way street, Gordy.”
“I always believed there were no secrets between us. I should have known better. You’re a Sharpe, after all.”
“Sorry the fishing expedition didn’t work out for you.”
He laughed. “I had that coming. You’re tougher than you used to be. Maybe you had a little of Sister Brigid left in you when you worked with me. Or is the smart remark your fiancé’s influence?” He winked at her. “I bet you complicate his life.”
“I’ll see you on Saturday,” Emma said.
“Another careful answer.” Gordy pointed a finger at her. “That’s good, Emma. Be careful, because your grandfather will burn you if you aren’t. Mark my words.”
“Can you find your own way out?”
“Not a problem.”
“Take care, Gordy. You know how to reach me should you need to.”
“And you know how to reach me.”
She gave a curt nod. “Yes, I do.”
“Good