Shadows at Midnight (21 page)

Read Shadows at Midnight Online

Authors: Elizabeth Jennings

Tags: #Romantic Suspense

BOOK: Shadows at Midnight
6.97Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Yeah. Call—no, stop by Roxanne’s and tell her to go visit her mother in New York for a few days. Tell her to buy a ticket on the company account and not come back until I send word. Her husband’ll understand. He’d be the first not to want her in the line of fire.”

Oh God
, Claire thought. Roxanne. Gentle, kind Roxanne, possibly in danger because of her. And Dan’s business. It hadn’t even occurred to her what the cost to Dan would be. He was involved in her mess now. For the duration, until they figured this out, his company had to grind to a halt. She knew enough about the business world to understand what that meant. Angry customers who would never come back, advances that would have to be repaid, new customers finding an empty office.

Dan glanced at her quickly, then did a double take as if reading her mind. He frowned and shook his head slightly.
Don’t worry about it.

Jesse nodded. “Count on it. That it?”

“Yeah, we’re good to—”

“No,” Claire said crisply.

Going to ground wasn’t going to help them uncover what was behind all this. Until they knew, they were vulnerable. Prey. She turned to Jesse.

“I’m going to need a laptop, mine was stolen. It doesn’t have to be expensive, a netbook will do, but it needs to have at least a 160 giga hard drive and 1.6 gigahertz speed. I don’t need encryption, I can download an app for that, but it’ll have to be preloaded with a good spreadsheet program. I don’t need Word, Google docs will do. Then I need a Thuraya satellite phone. Buy it anonymously. Or put down a false name as the purchaser.” Thuraya phones were run by a company headquartered in Saudi Arabia and their phone records were sealed until the end of time. Not even the NSA could penetrate them. It was the phone drug lords and terrorists used. And now Claire Day.

She opened her purse and had a sharp pang of pain. The breath simply whooshed out of her lungs as she looked inside. Wallet with a little cash and credit cards and ATM card, cosmetics case, keys to a burned husk of a home, flash drive, passport, day planner with a year of blank pages.

It was everything she owned. The only personal possessions she had left in the world. There was nothing else.

It would all have to be reconstituted, together with her broken-down self.

Claire Day 2.0.

She slid out her ATM card and held it out to Jesse. “Here. The PIN is 21539. I have a special arrangement with my bank and I can take out up to a thousand dollars a day. Put on a baseball cap with the longest bill you can find, the thickest coat you own to disguise your silhouette and wear sunglasses. I’d like for you to drive as far as you can away from where we’re going and take the money out in two hundred dollar increments from five different machines. Space the ATMs as far as possible. Don’t choose them on a vector, but mix up the locations. And tomorrow morning do the same. Take out another thousand in two hundred dollar amounts. Dan, give me your ATM, too.”

He already had his out. Jesse took it. “PIN’s 73105,” Dan said before Claire asked.

“Do the same with Dan’s ATM card, only in different places.”

“You won’t have far to go,” Dan said wryly. “Unlike Claire, I can’t take out more than three hundred a day.”

“Well then, Jesse should at least split it into two withdrawals of 150 dollars each. Don’t let the security cameras catch your face, Jesse. They usually have a forty-five degree angle, so from seven feet out, make sure your face is as covered as possible. Come to think of it, do you have a laser light?”

Jesse nodded, looking confused.

“Good. Use ATMs that are deserted. Shine the laser light in the security camera as soon as you get close enough, it’ll wipe the camera out, drive them crazy. And wear gloves. They’re going to be checking the security cameras of the ATMs and if there’s one where there is very little traffic, they’ll try to pick up some prints. Meet us the day after tomorrow in a place only the two of you know about with my computer and Thuraya phone and make sure you’re not followed.”

Jesse was staring at her, slack-jawed, then closed his mouth with a snap. “Yes, ma’am.” He blinked at Dan.

Dan shrugged. “DIA,” he said, as if that explained everything.

“Ah, a spook.” Jesse looked at Dan and Claire. “Okay. There’s a diner twenty miles east of the cabin on the county road. It doesn’t have security cameras and the owner’s a former Marine. Buddy of mine. Let’s meet there at noon the day after tomorrow. I’ll bring the money and the computer and the satphone.” He addressed Claire directly. “Anything else?”

“Yes.” Claire looked down at herself. “Go to one of the big box stores and get us a change of clothes. Several changes. Go for warmth because we don’t know what’s going to happen and where we’ll be going. Get me a couple of short-sleeved and long-sleeved T-shirts and two wool turtleneck sweaters and two fleece hoodies. Track suit pants, that way you don’t need to worry about sizes. Just get a small everything. Warm boots, size six and a half. And buy me a parka.” She narrowed her eyes at him. “Can you buy women’s underwear?”

His eyes rounded and he took a step back as if she’d asked him to French-kiss a rattlesnake. “No, ma’am.”

Claire sighed. Pity. Though God knew what he’d choose. She was a fanatic about nice underwear, but sending Jesse into a La Perla store would probably give him a heart attack. She’d just have to wash her undies until they got to a clothes shop without security cameras. If such a thing even existed. “Can you buy clothes for Dan, too?”

He nodded his head energetically. “Yes, ma’am. That I can do. From the skin out.”

Well, at least Dan would have new underwear.

“You need weapons?” Jesse asked Dan.

Dan shook his head. “No, I’m good. I’ve got my Springfield and my Desert Eagle in the Cherokee. And a long gun in the back. Plenty of ammo, too.”

Jesse looked more settled now that he was back on familiar terrain. “Check the gun locker in the cabin. There’s plenty of firepower there if you find you need it, plus a couple of KA-BARs, just in case. I’d like to bring in Frank Rizzo and Dave Sawyer. We might be needing some manpower here. They’re good men to have at your back.”

Claire was alarmed. Any new element could be dangerous, a way for their unseen enemy to hone in on them. “Is there some institutional tie there? Between you and Dan and Frank and Dave? Something someone can trace? Anything linking you guys up?”

Jesse looked uneasy. “Well, yeah. We were all in the same battalion. Dan and I were stationed in Okinawa together and Frank and Dave and I were in Guatemala.”

“Can someone trace that connection?” Claire glanced at Dan, then Jesse. “Whoever is after us can probably access military records. How many former Marines do you think are in the greater Washington area?”

“Well, that’s easy,” Jesse said. “I’m head of the Jarhead Club. There are about five hundred former Marines in a radius of about a hundred miles. I think that should muddy the waters a little.”

It would. She hoped. “Can you contact them in a secure way? Untraceable? I don’t think they’d be able to follow every retired Marine, but maybe they could follow every retired Marine who was in Dan’s battalion.”

Jesse nodded, face grim. “I’ll make sure the contacts are secure. Good point.”

“Claire.” Dan put his arm around her waist. She leaned back for just a second, just long enough to feel that solid chest against her back. The rage that had welled up had fired her with energy, but the adrenaline was depleting and she felt exhausted. “We should be going,” Dan said gently. He looked at Jesse. “Thanks for everything.”

Jesse waved at him as he got back into his own vehicle. “See you the day after tomorrow at the diner. I’ll bring your gear and the money.” He drove off and silence settled over the little park.

It would soon be first light, the sky would turn pewter in the east. The residential area was dark and quiet. Claire simply stood for a moment, her back resting against Dan, trying to gather the energy to do the next thing, whatever that was.

Dan turned her around, dropped a quick kiss on her mouth, then steered her to his vehicle. “We need to get going,” he said, his deep voice low. “Jesse’s cabin is about six hours away.”

“Where is it? Can someone track it down?”

He answered while switching on the engine.

“The cabin’s about forty miles from New Hope, Pennsylvania. It’s in real rugged country, the last two miles to get to the cabin are hardly more than a rutted track. You need four-wheel drive when it rains. And no, nobody can find it. Jesse’s stepfather left it to him, but the title never changed. No one would ever contest it, so Jesse just left it. And Jesse’s mom and stepfather had a common law marriage, so even if someone knew about Jesse, they couldn’t trace the property to him. The cabin was never declared, so on paper it’s just a piece of swampland. And Jesse’s father was a Vietnam vet and paranoid as hell, so he went into the deed office in New Hope and when no one was looking, he changed the coordinates.”

Paranoid, huh? As opposed to Dan, who kept CIA-level security in his home, together with a small arsenal.

Still, Dan’s paranoia was the reason she was alive. She wasn’t going to quibble.

They were driving down deserted streets, starting to exit the city limits. There was something hypnotic about watching Dan drive. He obviously felt no one was following them, because he wasn’t doing the incredible stunt-driving gyrations he’d gone into on the way to meet Jesse. His driving now was smooth and steady, movements precise, like clockwork.

The sound of the powerful engine was muted by the bodywork, which she now knew was armored. And no doubt the windows were bullet-resistant. It gave the SUV the feel of an airplane. She loved flying and right now, it was like being utterly safe in a plane, in the hands of a pro at thirty-five thousand feet.

Safe. Warm. Watching the buildings become spaced farther and farther apart, with long stretches of woodland in between.

Her eyes drooped.

A slight whir and the back of her seat went down. Dan reached behind him and a soft blanket fell over her.

“What’s this?”

“You should rest.”


I
should rest? What about you? You’ve still got a lot of driving ahead of you.” She should keep him company, keep him awake.

“Uh-huh. Close your eyes.”

“What?”

“Humor me. Close your eyes for just a minute.”

Claire rolled her eyes, then closed them, just to humor him. She had no intention of sleeping.

Two seconds later, she was out like a light.

T
HIRTEEN
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
BACK home, Bowen couldn’t believe it when Heston called in failure.
Bastard!
Heston had been a decent soldier but civilian life had made him soft.
One ex-Marine and one loony bitch had gotten the better of him
and
his men.
Twice
. One more failure and Heston was going to find himself at the bottom of the Tidal Basin with a couple of holes in his chest to make him stay down.

He texted Wizard. Find Daniel Weston and Claire Day. Check names of friends. Find Weston’s employees. I want to know if they buy anything or travel. Top priority.

A minute later a text came from Wizard. $$$$$????

He sighed. Goddamned mercenary son of a bitch.

100 K was the response. There. That should keep Wizard happy.

Okay. He was doing all he could on that front. Keeping his finger in the hole in the dike. But in the meantime, there was progress to be made on the other front.

He had hired a publicist, one of the best. Ostensibly to highlight his charity work in Africa, but actually to promote him. The publicist had understood that perfectly.

Each month, the publicist sent an update of articles on his work, mentions he got on blogs, videos of his interviews. This month there was the write-up in
Vanity Fair
and a
WaPo
interview. He’d made a list of HuffPo’s movers and shakers and
Time
did a special on development and did a sidebar about drugs for Africa with a nice photo where he had his face tilted upward into the sun, a man who was seeing the future and making it happen.

And, best of all, the top political blog discussed possible successors to the senior senator from Virginia, Jeffrey Neff, now mired in a corruption scandal.

The usual suspects and a few outsiders were mentioned as possible successors. The last of the outsiders, a man known for his philanthropy. There was a little profile of each possible candidate. His read:

A possible dark horse is former Homeland Security officer Bowen McKenzie, a man who quit his job after the bombing of the US Embassy in Laka, Makongo, last year to dedicate himself to eradicating disease in West Africa. McKenzie is widely respected for his fundraising for the New Day Foundation, which operates out of Laka, Makongo, and distributes antiretroviral drugs, antimalarial drugs and antibiotics throughout West Africa. McKenzie would be a breath of fresh air among the tired old pols whose names are being pulled out of the usual hat.
That was thanks to his publicist.
Neff was like an old bull elephant wounded by the corruption scandal. There was also word that Neff frequented prostitutes and his men and Wizard had a standing order to find them.

Bowen was going to bring the son of a bitch Neff to his knees.

Senator,
he thought,
you’re a dead man walking
.

He sat back in his chair, pleased, contemplating his future. He had big, big plans. One loopy former DIA analyst and one former jarhead were not going to stand in his way.

Other books

Tempest by Shakir Rashaan
Days of Winter by Cynthia Freeman
A Vote for Murder by Jessica Fletcher
When Danger Follows by Maggi Andersen
Madonna by Mark Bego
Speed Demons by Gun Brooke
Killing Honor by S. M. Butler
Double Prey by Steven F. Havill