Xander’s words dripped with ice. “Find out. I want to know if she’s the one who did this to me.”
Twenty-three
ON THE DRIVE
to the hospital, Jordan caught a news report on a local radio station that informed her, in matter-of-fact terms, that Kyle Rhodes, son of billionaire computer software magnate Grey Rhodes and infamous cyber-terrorist—“It was
Twitter
, people!”—had been stabbed by another inmate and transferred to Northwestern Memorial Hospital. According to the report, “unnamed sources” at Metropolitan Correctional Center had released a statement confirming only that the prison had taken certain measures deemed necessary to ensure the safety of one of its inmates who had been the target of violence on multiple occasions.
Hearing that, Jordan curled her fingers around the steering wheel. She reminded herself of Nick’s promise that her brother was fine.
When she arrived at the hospital, she stopped in front of the valet stand, not wasting time with the parking garage. The valet in his early twenties eyed the Maserati in awe as she stepped out of the driver’s seat.
“Nice,” he told her.
She quickly handed him the keys. “Just keep it under eighty.” She hurried through the sliding doors of the emergency room, trying not to think of the last time she’d rushed there after getting a frantic call from her father. That call had been about her mother’s car accident, and by the time she had arrived at the hospital, it had been too late.
Jordan pushed the memory from her mind.
Not this time.
She walked to the front desk, where a young receptionist greeted her with a polite smile.
“I’m here to see my brother, Kyle Rhodes. He was brought in about a half hour ago.”
The receptionist’s eyes widened. “Oh, yes—he passed right by here. He was kind of hard to miss, with the orange jumpsuit and the two prison guards following the stretcher.”
“Stretcher?” Jordan inhaled unsteadily. “Did he seem, you know, okay?”
The receptionist’s face brightened as she got That Look women often got around Kyle. “He seemed angry about the stretcher, but other than that, he looked fine. Although he did have the top part of his jumpsuit pushed down, with a bandage on his left arm. He was wearing only a T-shirt, but I didn’t see any blood on it or anything. Just that tight, white T-shirt. Very tight. Muscle-hugging, I’d say . . .”
Her voice trailed away as she stared off dreamily.
Jordan rolled her eyes. “He used to stick Skittles up his nose and shoot them into our mother’s flower pots. He called it ‘target practice.’” She snapped her fingers, trying to bring the woman back to reality. “So come on—where is he?”
The receptionist came out of her daze. “Right. Sorry.” She punched something into the computer. “They moved him up to room 360-A.” She pointed. “Elevators are down the hall and to the left.”
IT WOULD BE hard to miss Kyle’s room, considering it was the one with two armed prison guards standing out front. Jordan recognized one of them as her buddy from her visits to MCC, Mr. Cranky with all the rules.
He raised an eyebrow as she approached. “Girl-Sawyer . . . we were wondering when you were going to show up.”
Jordan stopped before him. “Does this mean we’re friends now?”
He gestured to their surroundings. “Different setting, different rules.”
“How’s my brother?”
“A little riled up. Mostly pissed about the stretcher.” He pointed to the door behind him. “The doctor is checking him out now. You can go in if you want,” he said with a kinder tone than usual.
“Thank you.” Jordan paused, thinking she saw a spark of knowing in Mr. Cranky’s eyes. She wondered how much the prison guard knew about her deal with the FBI, and if that had anything to do with his sudden change in attitude. She tabled that issue and pushed open the door to Kyle’s room.
Her brother was sitting upright on an examination bed, with the orange jumpsuit pushed down around his waist and a bandage on his forearm. His other hand was handcuffed to the side of the bed. He argued with the doctor who hovered over him with a needle.
“A tetanus shot? You guys carried me in here like an invalid for a
tetanus shot
?” He scowled.
“Ignore him. He’s always been a baby about shots,” Jordan said from the doorway.
Kyle looked over and grinned. “Jordo.”
The doctor seized on the distraction and promptly stuck him in the shoulder with the needle.
“Son of a—” Kyle half shouted in surprise. “That hurt more than the damn fork.”
“You’ll probably have some soreness at the injection site for a couple days,” the doctor said, not looking sorry at all. He stuck a Band-Aid on Kyle’s shoulder. Jordan smiled when she saw that it had Elmo faces on it. Such a tough guy, her brother.
She walked over to the table, thinking she must’ve heard him wrong. “Did you just say that you were stabbed with a fork?”
“Yes, I was stabbed with a fork,” Kyle grumbled.
The corners of Jordan’s mouth twitched. “I see.”
Kyle beckoned with his hand. “All right. Let’s just get it over with.”
“Salad or regular?”
“You know, I didn’t stop to measure it as it was going into my arm,” Kyle said sarcastically. “Fucking Puchalski.”
Jordan’s mouth dropped open, and she barely noticed as the doctor left the room. “Puchalski? The harmless bald guy with the snake tattoo?”
He
was the undercover agent on the inside?
Inconceivable.
Kyle threw out his free hand in exasperation. “I know—he and I always got along fine. Then tonight during lock-down, we were in line heading back to our cells and he starts up again with the Sawyer crap. So I told him to drop it, like I’ve told him a hundred times before, and he just
loses
it. Grabs me by the collar, tackles me to the ground, and starts yelling that he can call me whatever the hell he wants. Then he pulls a fork out of his shoe and does this.”
He shifted and lifted the bandage with his handcuffed hand, revealing four red—and pretty damn tiny—puncture wounds. Jordan squinted. “Is there something I’m supposed to be looking at there?”
Kyle made a face. “Very funny. It stung like a bitch. For at least . . . two or three minutes.” He saw her staring at him and cocked his head. “What?”
Jordan said nothing. Instead, she reached out and did something she hadn’t been able to do in four months. She hugged her brother hard and held on for as long as she wanted. “I’m just glad to see you’re okay.”
“Don’t be getting all mushy on me now. You know the rules,” Kyle growled. But he squeezed her back tightly with his free arm.
She felt tears of relief spring into her eyes. “Different setting, different rules.” She pulled back, and quickly brushed at her eyes. “Mr. Cranky the prison guard told me that.”
“Did he also happen to tell you why they brought me to this hospital?” Kyle asked. “Because I sure as hell can’t figure it out.”
There was a voice to their left.
“They brought you here because I asked them to.”
An attractive woman with long brown hair and wearing a gray pin-striped suit stood in the doorway. She walked over and shook hands with Jordan and Kyle.
“Cameron Lynde, U.S. attorney,” she said in introduction. She folded her arms across her chest and studied Kyle. “So what do we do with you now, Mr. Rhodes? I’ve been getting all sorts of reports that you’re having problems at MCC.”
Kyle brushed his hair off his face defensively. “Nothing I can’t handle.”
“Six fights in the last four months—and now this attack. You’re a PR disaster waiting to happen,” Cameron said.
Jordan threw Kyle a look. “You only told me about four fights.”
“It’s
nothing
,” Kyle said to both of them.
The U.S. attorney appeared to mull this over. “I don’t like it. With the media’s interest in your case, if something happened to you at MCC, my office would take a lot of heat.”
“Your office didn’t seem too concerned about my wellbeing four months ago,” Kyle said.
“I think it’s safe to say that the
former
U.S. attorney had a very different agenda than I do,” Cameron said. “You’ve served four months of hard time—harder than many others. Perhaps we can look into an alternate arrangement.”
“Thanks, but no thanks. I don’t want to be shipped off to another prison—the same thing will just happen there.” Kyle pointed begrudgingly to Jordan. “Plus, if you take me out of Chicago, I’d miss my annoying sister’s cheery visits.”
Jordan nearly got teary-eyed again. That may have been the nicest thing her pain-in-the-ass brother had ever said to her. She put her arm around him. “He’s the gum I can’t scrape off the bottom of my shoe,” she explained to the U.S. attorney.
Cameron laughed. “I have a friend like that.” She turned back to Kyle. “I wasn’t talking about moving you to a different prison. I was thinking more along the lines of home detention.”
The door opened again, and a tall and well-built man wearing jeans and a corduroy blazer walked into the room. He carried a backpack in one hand. Jordan recognized him as the FBI agent who’d “accidentally” bumped into her at Starbucks and slipped Nick’s keys into her coat pocket. But if the agent recognized her—and she was sure he did—he gave away nothing.
“Agent Pallas. Perfect timing,” Cameron said.
“Are we all set?” he asked.
“I was just about to explain to Mr. Rhodes how this will work.” She turned back to Kyle. “This is Special Agent Jack Pallas—he’s going to fit you with an electronic monitoring device that you’ll wear around your ankle twenty-four hours a day. Inside the device is a GPS transmitter that will tell the supervising probation officer in charge of your parole where you are at all times. You’ll be able to work, and will be permitted to leave your residence for preapproved purposes like doctor’s appointments, court appearances, things of that nature. Your probation officer will go over the specifics of the arrangement with you.”
Kyle held up his hand, confused. “Probation officer, parole—what are you talking about? I have twelve more months of incarceration to serve.”
“Not anymore. You’re going home, Mr. Rhodes.”
Agent Pallas moved to Kyle’s side. He took keys out of his pocket and unlocked the handcuff with a
snap
.
Kyle stared at his free hand for a moment, then peered up at Cameron with a confused expression. “I don’t understand. Why would you do this?”
Of course, three people in the room knew the true answer to that question. But Jordan maintained her poker face, as did the U.S. attorney.
“Because it’s the fair thing to do, Mr. Rhodes. That’s the best answer I can give you,” Cameron said. “One thing, however—for appearances’ sake, I think it would be best if you spent tonight at the hospital. And I’d appreciate it if you would keep a low profile over the next couple weeks.”
“Not a problem. It’s not like I have an active social calendar these days,” Kyle said.
“Sit back and put your left leg on the table,” Agent Pallas told him. He unzipped the backpack and pulled out a black ankle monitor.
Kyle lifted the leg of his jumpsuit. “I don’t know what to say,” he said to Cameron. “Thank you, I guess. It’s good to see they’ve replaced Silas Briggs with someone who’s a little more reasonable.” He grinned. “Not to mention, someone with a much prettier face.”
Agent Pallas snapped the ankle monitor on, and Kyle yelled out in pain.
“Son of a bitch, you got some skin there!” he said to Pallas.
Cameron threw the FBI agent a look. “Jack.”
He shrugged. “It slipped.” He turned back to Kyle with a look that could wilt plants.
“Easy there, Wolverine,” Kyle grumbled. “Put the claws back in—I meant no disrespect.”
There was a knock at the door. Mr. Cranky the prison guard stuck his head in. “Hey—we’ve got a package for Sawyer.”
“You’re getting deliveries at the hospital already?” Jordan asked her brother.
Agent Pallas went to the door. He took the package from Mr. Cranky, which turned out to be a blue garment bag, and brought it into the room. He hung the bag on the back of the door, unzipped it, and did a quick check of the contents.
“Clothes? Did you arrange for that?” Cameron asked Jack.
He shook his head. “Must’ve been one of the other agents.” He stole a glance at Jordan, and she knew.
Nick
.
Cameron clapped her hands together. “Well. I’m sure you two don’t want us hanging around any longer.” She pulled a card out of her jacket pocket and handed it to Kyle. “This is the contact information for your probation officer. He’ll be expecting you to call him tomorrow when you get home. Remember, we’ll be watching.” She joined Agent Pallas at the door, and paused before the two of them left. “And stay away from Twitter, Mr. Rhodes. For all our sakes.” With an efficient turn of her heel, she was gone.