Midnight Special: Coming on Strong
Page 2
Marni gave a mental shiver of delight.
All she needed was a break. And that break was standing in front of her, licking frosting off her knuckles.
“You’ve had one sexy guy in here in the entire month, yet you think this is the place I should look for eligible bachelors?”
“You’re the one who came in here looking for a guy.”
Touché.
“If I wanted a guy—” which she wasn’t saying she did “—I wouldn’t want one who was sick. I want a guy who’s healthy. One who’s strong, with a brilliant mind and an intense personality. Sexy and fit, with a body that you can tell he takes care of. Running, swimming, I’m not picky. As long as he’s got a sweet ass and some solid biceps. Oh, and washboard abs. There’s nothing sexier than a guy with a flat stomach in tight jeans and a T-shirt.”
Whew. Marni almost had to fan herself over that image. Not that she wanted a guy. She really didn’t. But the fantasy was pretty sweet to entertain, all the same.
“We get guys like that,” Sammi assured her. “The hottie that’s in here right now? He’s all of that and more. I mean, not too many guys can look gorgeous after almost being blown to pieces. But this guy is hot, and not just because his hair was singed.”
“Hair straightener gone wrong?” Marni joked with watchful eyes.
“Building gone boom.”
Bingo.
“So what’s his name?”
A name would tell her if he was really with the FBI. Marni’s pulse raced. A name might, with the right research, even tell her what the case was that’d resulted in an exploding building.
“I nicknamed him tall, dark and sexy.” Sammi shrugged. “But really, I just know him as ‘ruptured inner ear and broken rib.’”
Tall, dark and sexy? What good did that do her?
Well, Marni considered, it might do her good if she was open to getting naked and wild with a guy. But hot sex was on page two of her goal list, something she could get to later. After she’d reached her career goals.
“How can you stand it?” She tilted her head toward the computer. “You claim the sexiest guy you’ve ever seen was in here, you have his vital statistics, home address, heck, even where he works all there in the computer. You’re telling me you don’t peek?”
How had she cornered all of the nosiness in her entire family?
“Peeking wouldn’t be ethical,” Sammi said, her lips a prim bow.
“What fun is your job if you can’t peek?”
“Oh, and your job is better? Why don’t you get to bring home all those fashions you’re always writing about?”
Because the magazine had a strict policy against their reporters accepting products, figuring any gifts would result in a story bias.
Okay, fine. Ethics were a good thing.
But they weren’t going to help her get that name.
“There’s tons of intrigue and excitement in Style to make up for the lack of perks. You should see how crazy it is during fashion week.” Marni didn’t add that most of the craziness stemmed from her chafing over always being stuck covering fluff stories. She’d been thrilled to get on with a magazine like Optimum. An award-winning periodical with national distribution, covering everything from politics to human interest to entertainment with a little crime and world news thrown in, too. It was a dream job. Originally hired for her gift with human-interest pieces, Marni had quickly realized that wasn’t going to get her any big attention. So she’d taken the only senior editorial spot and became the head of Style. But now nobody took her seriously. She was the pretty little blonde with an eye for spotting the next hot trend and a gift for schmoozing with the hoitiest of the toity. But not a real journalist.
This story was it, she vowed. The one that’d make them see her as more than a curvy Kewpie doll with a trivial byline. But first she had to get that name.
“I guess you’re right, though.” Marni put a heavy pout into her tone, adding a sigh for good measure. “The magazine really is a lousy place to meet single, heterosexual guys. So maybe you can help me out. Tell me more about the one with the singed hair. He sounds dreamy. Maybe I could meet him.”
Marni wanted to cringe, to yell, Hey, doesn’t anyone know me well enough to realize that’s total B.S.? But she knew better. It didn’t matter how often she claimed her career was her life, twenty-six was old-maid status in her family.
“Really?” Sammi did a little dance in place, jiggling with enough excitement to dislodge the pencil from behind her ear. “You want to meet tall, dark and sexy? He’s in exam room five, and has to walk right past us when he leaves. You can check him out yourself.”
Was it the FBI agent? Was he working the same case? Grilling her cousin and trying to sneak out a name was one thing. But actually seeing the guy herself, being able to follow him, maybe even meet him? Holy cow. Marni almost did a little dance herself right there on the faded linoleum. It took all her control not to rush down the hall, trying to find the fifth exam room.
“Nurse Clare-Warren?”
The women both turned, Sammi coming to subtle attention for the approaching doctor. “Hang back,” she muttered to her cousin with a subtle shooing motion of her fingers.
Using patience she only expended on the job, Marni gave a cheerful nod and stepped aside. All the while pretending she didn’t see the doctor trying to catch her eye.
This was it. Her shot. If she pulled off this article, they’d give her a slot as an investigative reporter. Working the crime beat. Digging for details, breaking the big stories. In a world where most reports in the papers and magazines were fed via carefully controlled press releases and media manipulation, she wanted to stand out. To be like the big reporters in the heyday of newspapers. The ones who squirreled out information, who were often as instrumental as cops in stopping crime. The ones who weren’t afraid to expose ugliness.
She wanted to be like her aunt Robin. A Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter, she’d given the cold shoulder to traditions, diving into the men’s milieu when women were still chained to the oven by their apron strings. She’d jumped right in and made their world her own. She’d interviewed global leaders, had waded into war zones and broken stories on topics as varied as criminal justice and corrupt politicians. Her career was amazing.
Exactly the path Marni wanted for herself. She just needed her break.
And this FBI case, with the exploding building, art theft and rumored mob connections, was going to give it to her. She’d write a huge story exposing the truths, the reality of how the FBI had busted a bigwig CEO, and she’d get the inside scoop on the real crimes of Charles Burns before the trial got going. Fame, fortune, accolades...they were right around the corner.
“Marni.” Sammi’s impatient tone interrupted Marni’s daydream. “This is Dr. Green. Maybe he could show you through the E.R.”
Huh?
Shaking off the dream of glory, Marni pulled her attention away from her ambitions and focused on the eager man standing next to her cousin. Forty, balding with bad plugs and a hint of garlic on his breath, he was looking at her as if she was his favorite centerfold come to life.
“Hello, it’s nice to meet you,” she offered formally, hoping the distant tone would clue him in to her disinterest.
“It’s great to meet you,” he said, shaking her hand just long enough to make her want to grab the antibacterial lotion off the nurses’ station. “Nurse Clare-Warren explained that you’re writing an article on our hospital?”
Again, huh?
At Marni’s questioning look, Sammi shrugged, then tilted her head toward the no-personal-visitors notice taped on the file cabinet. Then she held up five fingers and tilted her head toward the exam rooms.
Ooooh. Marni offered her cousin, and the good doctor, a big smile.
“You were interested in a tour of our emergency facilities?” he queried, making it sound as though he was extending an invitation to see the backseat of his Lexus. “I’ll fill you in on the details of what I do
here.”
Sammi was now mouthing married behind his back and making faces.
Figured.
Still, he could get her in closer eavesdropping range of exam room five, so she might as well take advantage of his interest. In the fake article, and in her body.
When a girl looked like Marni did, the choices were limited. Fight to be taken seriously, courting frustration and disappointment on a regular basis. Or accept that her curvaceous figure, Kewpie doll face, flaxen hair and big blue eyes were the stuff fantasies were made of, and use it to her advantage. Marni wasn’t big on frustration, disappointment or losing. So she was all about the advantage.
“Sure. I’d love a tour, especially of the exam areas. That’s the focus of the article,” she lied. Smiling, she pulled out her ever-present notebook, making sure her elbows angled out so as to keep at least a foot between them. Noting exam rooms one and two to her left, she turned in the opposite direction.
And was pretty sure she heard her cousin giggle as she went. It was hard to tell, though, with the doctor rambling on about his qualifications. A few of them even applied to his job.
“Excuse me, Dr. Green?” An exhausted-looking guy in scrubs stepped out of one of the exam rooms and gestured for help. “A minute?”
The good doctor gave a frustrated huff, then asked Marni to wait.
Her gaze angled one door away, labeled five.
“Oh, sure.” She bit her lip, then made a show of making a few notes. “I’ll be fine here. I’ll just get everything you said written down before I forget.”
Giving the doctor a big smile, Marni stepped just a smidge to the left and let her eyes slide past the balding head to the open door of exam room five.
Her heart raced. Her pulse skipped. Her mouth went dry.
Oh, baby.
Those were definitely some sexy shoulders. Right there, above a very nice ass. The shoulders were bare, and Marni was pretty sure it was a crime that the ass was covered.
She’d never wanted anything more than her career.
Until now.
* * *
“I DON’T HAVE TIME for this crap.”
Hunter glared at the doctor, then shifted the same threatening look at his boss.
“You should have thought of that before you messed yourself up again. What were you doing chasing some low-level art fence? It has nothing to do with the Burns case, dammit.” Looking as frustrated as Hunter felt, Deputy Director Murray took the clipboard from the doctor’s hands and flipped through the chart. As if he could change the diagnosis by reading it himself. “You should have taken the time off like I ordered.”
“That was an order? I thought it was a suggestion,” Hunter countered with a grin. At least, it was supposed to be a grin. But the good doctor, his hands now free of the clipboard, was poking at Hunter’s ribs again like some kind of sadist. They were cracked again, dammit. He knew it, the doctor knew it, Murray knew it. Poking wasn’t gonna change that fact any more than Murray glaring at the chart was going to change the diagnosis of further damage to Hunter’s inner ear.
“You’re supposed to be on the West Coast to testify in a week,” Murray snapped, shoving the metal file at Hunter in accusation. “How are you planning to make that happen now that you’re on the injured hero’s no-fly list?”
“Seriously?” Hunter asked the doctor. “I can’t fly at all?”
“Not unless you want to risk losing your hearing, collapsing in the air or possibly bleeding from the brain.” The doctor offered a cheery smile to go with that dire prognosis before stepping out of the room and closing the door behind him.
Well, none of that sounded appealing.
Hunter’s brain, still thankfully not bleeding, raced. He had to get to California for that trial.
Charles Burns was a nasty piece of work who thought he was going to skate on the current charges. He’d already won the first round by having the case tried in California, claiming that was his main residence and corporate headquarters. His defense team was the best dirty money could buy and the crooked CEO knew that the worst he’d do was a couple of years and a fistful of fines.
Unless the FBI could pull together all the pieces that had exploded in their lap last week. Pieces that would add racketeering and, if Murray had his way, attempted murder to the list of charges. Burns was so sure that he’d gotten away with murder. The creep had no idea that Hunter had rescued the victim he’d left for dead just before the building exploded. It was up to Hunter to turn a botched homicide into enough evidence to not only put Burns behind bars for life, but take down his entire operation for good.
He had an ace in the hole to make that happen. By hauling Burns’s victim out of the explosion last week, before she was blown into tiny bits, he’d secured the devotion—and a huge amount of insider information—from the rumored late Mrs. Burns. In return, he’d promised that she’d stay dead.
“Beverly Burns only agreed to hand over her husband’s books, files and passwords in exchange for not being brought into the trial.”
Murray waved that away.
“And she’s yet to hand it all over. At this point, she’s offered up maybe, what? Seventy percent of what she said she would? She’s holding out the rest for a cushy life of luxury in witness protection. To hell with that. I don’t care if she’s interested in testifying or not. We have ways of making people talk.”
His eyes narrow with dislike, Hunter asked, “Don’t you need a heavy accent and a flashlight when you say shit like that?”
Murray sneered. Hunter’s flippant remarks were just one more thing the deputy director didn’t like about the man he saw as his subordinate.
“Look, I want this guy put away. We have a witness who can guarantee that. Just because you’re all comfy cozy with criminals doesn’t mean we should coddle her at the expense of the case.”
“Comfy cozy?”
“Black Oak, California,” Murray shot back. “Three known criminal elements, and you let them go. Hell, you were best man at one of their weddings last year, weren’t you?”
“Caleb Black was DEA and is now the sheriff of Black Oak. Hardly a criminal element.”
“And the rest of his family?”
“Well, I did walk Danita down the aisle when she married Gabriel. But I wasn’t best man at that one, even though Danita’s FBI, too. Maya married an FBI agent as well and I caught the bouquet at their wedding. Is that too cozy?” Hunter made a show of shaking his head in disgust. “Yeah, they’re all major criminal elements, all right. Good thing each is assigned their own personal law-enforcement babysitter.”
“You think it’s funny?”
Yeah, pretty much. Murray was one of those guys who operated in black-and-white. Us and them. Good and bad. Hunter saw life in shades of gray.
He didn’t say that, though. Instead, he pointed out, “You’re just pissed that you’d have arrested the wrong person.”
“I’d have arrested a criminal.”
“Tobias Black wasn’t behind the crimes in question. Arresting him would have been a grave miscarriage of justice. Just as it will be if you force Beverly Burns to testify against her husband, jettisoning the illusion that she died in that explosion. If Burns knows she’s alive, he’ll have her killed. He knows she’s alive and cooperating with the feds, he’ll have her killed faster. She won’t make it to the trial.”
“She’s under FBI protection. She’ll make it to testify.”
Hunter just stared. Unspoken, but clear, was the truth that if she testified against her husband, her life expectancy would thereafter be on par with that of a fruit fly.
“This is my case.” Ignoring the pained scream from his rib, Hunter got to his feet and gave Murray a look of cold determination. “I’ve already cleared the plan through all appropriate channels.”
“I spoke with the director myself. Unless you can show you’ve nailed Burns without his wife’s testimony, she’s taking the stand. You have a week into the trial. Good luck with that.” He wa
ited a beat, then with a smile filled with malice, added, “Oh, by the way. How are you getting to California? Driving? You’re gonna have a great time building a case from behind the wheel.”
That Hunter’s car currently resembled tin foil went unspoken. Not because the deputy director was playing nice. But because the man knew the value of leaving the worst unsaid. It lingered there, floating above them like a vile stench.
Hunter debated his options.
“Fine, I’ll take a train.”
“Train?”
“Sure. There has to be a train going from New York to San Francisco.” Despite the fact that the room was spinning in three directions at once, Hunter shifted into intimidation mode, using his four-inch advantage to loom over his boss. “Bottom line, we’re not bringing Beverly Burns into this trial. I made a promise. She gave us ample information to indict Burns on twice as many charges as we already had. Enough to shut down his entire operation. In exchange, we not only tuck her away in the hidden depths of WitSec, but make sure everyone believes she died in that explosion.”
“The trial is in a week. And we’re still desperately sifting through all of that ample information. It’s not like the pieces we need are just sitting there waiting to be used to nail him to the wall.”
“I know the Burns operation inside out. I’ll find every single piece,” Hunter vowed.
“This case hinges on you, then, doesn’t it? Now there’s a damned good chance this guy will walk free because you couldn’t resist hotdogging it down the pier on the hood of your car.”
Hunter gritted his teeth. Asshole or not, Murray was right.
“I can work the case while I’m on the train just as well as I could here in my office. I’ll just take it with me.”
“Those files are classified.”
“I’ve got clearance. You need more, I’ll make a couple of phone calls and get it for you.”
Hunter didn’t pull the connection card out very often. He didn’t need to. His father’s legacy at the FBI was the stuff legends were made of. The bureau chief was Hunter’s godfather. And his own record wasn’t just shiny, it glittered. So while he never played the prima donna, it was pretty rare that he heard the word no.