by Gini Koch
Chuckie nodded. “Right, so you can’t use us to distract Mossad, Kitty.”
Clearly these two were as aware as I was that ACE hadn’t suddenly returned. Also as clearly they didn’t think I had an actual plan in place and was just bluffing until I came up with something. Chose to be offended later.
“We need a variety of people found. I’d love to send Mossad on the Hunt for Colonel Hamlin, but then we’d have to tell them what’s going on with Malcolm and probably everything else and I think we’d rather not.”
“We’d definitely rather not,” Chuckie said emphatically.
“Okay, so before I roll my plan idea, where’s Camilla? She showed up because we had a tip that something was going down, right?”
“Right,” Chuckie said. “And something did. Now I think we were tipped so that Eugene would absolutely be caught.”
“I agree. Okay, so, nice dodge and all, but what is Camilla working on? I need to know so I don’t duplicate effort in the wrong way.”
He sighed. “She’s inserting into Gaultier. Based on what happened with Buchanan, what was found there, and some other intel we have, it’s the best place for her right now.”
“Super, so no one’s going to be on her turf. Tim and James, you guys need to get Mossad looking for Clarence. He’s more dangerous than the Dingo, by far, and we need him captured. Just like Raul can tell us who took over for Reid, Clarence likely can as well. Or else he’s now Raul’s BFF and that means he can tell us where Raul is. Bottom line, we need him found and neutralized, but not killed. Not yet, anyway.”
“What other intel, Chuck?” Amy asked. “And don’t try lying to me.”
“No, I can tell you. Now. We think some of the former human employees for the former Diplomatic Corps got jobs with Gaultier. We know some went to work for Titan, but they’ve moved on since that company’s been under investigation. Camilla’s been tracking them for almost as long as Jamie’s been alive. They’re hiding well, which means they have help and protection.”
Amy nodded. “Once I take over, whatever you need, you let me know.”
“This is touching,” Christopher said. “But I haven’t heard anyone say where they actually think Clarence is. I’ve been searching, and before someone insults my abilities again, I’m the fastest person here. And I’ve searched most of this damn town. He’s nowhere, and there’s no sign of him.”
“I’m worried that he’s in the cemetery Kitty’s going to,” Big George said. “That’s where he ran when you chased him, right?”
“He ran in, yes, but if he kept on going, I think I have a guess as to where he went. Clarence was running all over the place when I was after him. He was trying to lose me. He gave that up finally and pretty much made a beeline for the cemetery. But while I think the Dingo’s there because he has a sense of humor, Clarence would never have the American history background to find hiding out where a Civil War traitor is buried funny, and we’ve established that he also has no sense of humor anyone’s aware of.”
“So, where is he, if he’s not in the cemetery?” Christopher asked.
“I think he’s somewhere he can sleep and get food without anyone paying much attention. I think he’s at Georgetown University somewhere. He can go into a student’s room and sleep—they’re not monitored and they’re on winter break. He can steal food easily, either on campus or at the Medical Center, which is there if he gets hurt.”
“That’s brilliant,” Reader said.
“If he’s there,” Christopher pointed out. “But before anyone asks, no, I didn’t search the colleges, other than the grounds.”
“So, get Mossad over there on whatever pretext you like, then tell them why Clarence is a bigger danger than the Dingo.”
“We’ll work it out.” Reader looked at Gower. “You’re not coming along.”
Gower rolled his eyes. “I know. I get to be bored. You need Airborne, though. Because if Mossad says ‘screw you, we’re after the Dingo,’ you’re going to need help.”
“Yep,” Reader said as Mom came back in.
“We’re cleared to go, so my team, let’s move. Say your good-byes, we leave in five.” Got a hug and kiss from Mom, then she went to say good-bye to Dad and Jamie. Kevin followed her to go say good-bye to Denise and their kids.
Jeff held me tightly then gave me his usual slow, sensuous, and great kiss. “Be careful, baby,” he said as we pulled apart.
“You too. Remember to keep your head low.”
“We’re going to a prison facility. I’ll be fine. You’re having a romantic meeting with an assassin. It’s you I’m worried about.”
“Unless I’m there with you and no one’s trying to kill us, I don’t find cemeteries to be romantic. So you can keep your jealousy in check.”
He grinned, gave me another quick kiss, and followed after my mother to say good-bye to Jamie. Christopher and Amy and Chuckie and Naomi were having similar good-byes. Michael looked kind of down.
“You okay?” I asked him.
He shrugged. “My girl’s not here, and I don’t want to call her because I’m sure I’m not supposed to be telling anyone where we’re going.” Chose not to share that he probably couldn’t reach her anyway. Wondered how long locked-door meetings went. Too long when I needed to talk to my Washington Insiders was my feeling.
“The player’s missing his girl?” Put my hand to his forehead. “No fever.”
He looked embarrassed. “Caroline’s just . . . special.”
“Yeah, she is. She likes you too, don’t worry.”
“There’s liking and then there’s liking, you know? I’m not sure she’s in the liking category.”
“Wow, are you feeling well? I’ve never seen you this unconfident about a woman.”
Abigail came over. “Someone’s in lo-ove.”
Michael looked more embarrassed. “Wouldn’t tell you if I was.”
Abigail snorted. “Because I can tell.” She sighed. “Well, not in the usual way. But I can tell by how you’re acting.”
“Michael, we need to go,” Christopher said. “Angela doesn’t like to be kept waiting.”
“Later,” Michael said as he trailed after Christopher and Chuckie.
“You think Caroline feels the same about Michael?” Abigail asked worriedly.
“I haven’t talked to her about it.” Or anything else since the party. “But I do know that they’ve been going out exclusively for longer than she ever has with anyone else.”
“That’s good then.”
Naomi, who had been at least somewhat alert and involved, seemed to lose all interest the moment Chuckie walked out. She was looking at her phone, but a quick glance told me she was looking at wedding cakes.
“Okay,” Tim said. “I have Mossad set up. They want to get into position early, because they’re really anal.”
“Or just that good.”
“Yeah? Then why are we leading them on this wild goose chase? Oh, that’s right. So you can meet up with assassins you think are your friends now.”
“They are. Anyway, how are you going to search if they stake out?”
“Now, see, that’s where my special genius comes in. I told them you wouldn’t tell us exactly where you were meeting the Dingo. So we’re going to search the area first, which because most of us are human, will take a while. James, Airborne just landed in the Georgetown Student Center bathroom. We’d better get moving. Won’t look good if Mossad beats us there because they don’t get to use a gate.”
“Okay, girlfriend, if it goes bad, which I fully expect it to, don’t play hero and call us right away. We’ll use a floater and get to you.”
“Will do, James, I promise.”
Reader hugged and kissed Gower good-bye, then he and Tim took off. The room, which had seemed incredibly full just a few minutes ago, now felt empty, despite the fact that we still had a lot of people in here.
“What do the rest of us do?” Naomi asked, looking at her phone instead of any of us. “Sit here an
d wait around?” Abigail rolled her eyes and shot me a “sorry” look.
“No. Let’s see if we can figure out who the mysterious L is and if there’s a deeper reason for why all the reps have been killed.”
“But why?” Henry asked. “Everyone’s said that there’s no point.”
“There’s still a point. We need to know if Santiago was killed only by accident or if he was on the hit list, too. Mimi, Abby, I want you two in charge of that.”
“Why us?” Naomi asked, still looking at her phone. “Abby and I don’t have our powers working. And I have wedding things I need to focus on,” she added in a tone I could only think of as whiney and petulant.
Maybe it was because I was tired. Maybe it was because she was whining and I wasn’t used to hearing any Gower whine, let alone Naomi. And maybe it was because I knew that she and Abigail felt they were handicapped now and I was tired of pretending that this was an okay attitude for them to have. Or maybe it was because she wanted to screw around with wedding stuff while everyone else tried to stop the bad guys.
I snapped.
“Oh, cry me a river.”
“What?” Naomi looked and sounded shocked. Well, at least she wasn’t looking at her phone for the moment.
“That means stop whining and acting like your life is all suck and no happy. Look, I get it. You have no talents any more. I’m sure that’s tough. But you still have all five senses, and you’ve still got your minds. Why are you refusing to use them?”
“We can’t function like we used to,” Naomi said defensively.
“I know, believe me. Everyone knows. You’ve been having a humongous pity party for the past several months and I guess no one feels up to telling you the truth. But I will, because we have a lot of dead people and they’d all trade losing one sense over losing their lives, I can guarantee it. So here’s the truth. You’ve taken the bravest, most important thing the two of you ever did and turned it into your excuse to never do anything ever again. And I personally think that sucks and you’re both better than that.”
“Whoa,” Henry said quietly. “That’s kind of harsh.”
“What Kitty means,” Amy said quickly, “is that we need your help, even if it’s not all the help you could have given in the past.”
Naomi’s eyes were narrowed. “No, that’s not what she means at all.”
“True enough, but thanks for the attempted diplomatic save, Ames. Yes, it’s harsh and yes, I mean it. I have two Cultural Attachés who haven’t done squat for this Mission or their people since Operation Destruction. All you’ve done, Naomi, is plan a huge freaking wedding that your fiancé would rather die than attend. He’ll attend it because he loves you, but he won’t enjoy it.”
“What?” Naomi looked seriously pissed. “How dare you! You got the huge royal wedding. You’re the only one who’s good enough to get one, is that what you mean?”
I snorted. “Hardly. I didn’t want the huge royal wedding. Jeff and I had no choice. And I’d like to remind you that we were fighting for our lives, and the lives of everyone on this planet, up to around ten minutes before we trotted down the aisle, around the ballroom, and through the woods.”
“I didn’t want the big to-do, and neither did Christopher,” Amy said quickly. “It’s not the end of the world to have a small wedding.”
“Chuck is happy to have this wedding,” Naomi insisted. And then she went for one of the Standard Girl Arguments. “You’re just jealous he’s marrying me.”
Amy cringed. Because she’d known me pretty much as long as Chuckie had, and she knew what was coming.
“Oh my God, really? Babe, let’s be real. If I’d been more in love with Chuckie than I was with Jeff, you would not be in this picture. Happily for everyone, Chuckie’s gotten over me and fallen in love with you, hurrah. But Chuckie’s my best friend, and you’re too busy feeling sorry for yourself and telling yourself that you ‘deserve’ the big wedding to pay attention to the fact that he’s dreading the whole thing. He wanted to get married by a freaking Elvis impersonator in Vegas way back when. Buy a clue.”
“He’s never said anything like this to me! You’re just making this all up!”
Abigail winced. “Sis, you might want to calm down,” she said quietly.
Naomi ignored her. “You think you know Chuck better than me, but you’re wrong. He’d tell me if he didn’t want this wedding.”
“He wants the wedding, you idiot. He just doesn’t want the kind of wedding you’re planning. And he hasn’t said anything because he thinks you’re happy. Or if he has, you’ve ignored it. You’ve turned into a raving bridal lunatic, and you know what? I was sympathetic. Right up until the moment you had the freaking nerve to act like all anyone wants you for is your talents at dream and memory reading or whatever and then to think your wedding is more important than saving people’s lives. It’s insulting to me, to Chuckie, to your brother, and to everyone else.”
“I’m so sorry that you don’t approve of my having issues with losing something that’s been a part of me for my entire life,” Naomi snarled.
“You want to keep on with your pity party? Go for it. But if that’s your decision, here’s mine—get the hell out of this Embassy and never, ever come back.”
CHAPTER 88
THE ROOM WAS SILENT, to the point where someone honestly could have heard a pin drop.
Naomi huffed at me and spun on her heel. Abigail grabbed her and held her. “No,” she said quietly. “I’m done. You don’t get to leave.”
“What? Why not? She’s insulted us and told me to get out.”
“No,” Abigail said calmly. “She insulted you. By telling you the truth, what I should have had the guts to tell you months ago. And she only said to get out if you were refusing to stop feeling sorry for yourself.”
Gower put his arm around Naomi. “You are not leaving.”
“Are you getting rid of her, then?” Naomi asked.
“No,” he said calmly. “Because Kitty’s right. You’ve been acting like a spoiled, petulant child, and we can no longer afford to allow you that luxury.”
“But she was mean to me!”
“Did you lose maturity when you lost your powers? I mean that seriously. I’ve never heard you this whiney and out of control, Naomi. Is it just the wedding crap, are you sick, or have you simply become the biggest whining pain in the ass ever?”
“How can you talk to me like this?” Naomi asked.
Amy rolled her eyes. “Oh, for God’s sake. She’s talking to you like this because she cares about you, and, more than that, she cares about Chuck. I’m with Kitty—why should we let him marry a whining loser? Or, to put it another way, who are you and what have you done with the Naomi we know and love?”
“Could she be an android? I’m sort of serious.”
“You want to cut my head off to find out?” Naomi snarled. “Tito might be able to sew it back on.”
“Tito. Good call.” I grabbed her wrist and pulled. I was riding on waves of fury—there was no way Naomi was getting away from me. We headed out of the kitchen and for the stairs. Everyone else followed us. Dinner and a show. Though we hadn’t had dinner, come to think of it.
“Let me go.”
“Only when we get to the top so you can roll down the stairs.”
“When did you become my enemy?”
“When did I become your romantic rival? You played that card, my friend, I didn’t.”
“You’re pulling rank.”
“Babe, I have the rank. Ergo, I get to pull it all I want.” I’d been moving at the slower hyperspeed, so we reached the third floor quickly. I headed us into the infirmary.
Nurse Carter stared at us. “You two okay?”
“Major girl fight between me and Whiney Bridezilla here. Is Nathalie awake?”
“Yes. Doctor Hernandez is with her. I don’t think it’s a good idea for you to go in.”
“No, probably not. But I think we need to.” Went to the room Nathalie had been
in. Knocked quietly and then opened the door.
Nathalie was crying. Less hysterically than before, but still, crying. I shoved Naomi into the room. “Her husband was just murdered in front of her, tossed off the top of the building where they lived and were happy. We don’t know why. I wanted you in charge of trying to figure that out while the rest of us were off doing other things to try to figure out who killed him and why. We’re fighting because of your response to that request. Think about someone other than yourself for the first time in what appears to be far too long a time.”
I closed the door and held it shut.
“Kitty,” Abigail said slowly, “I have to ask—is this a common human technique?”
“No, it’s not.”
“Ah. Because it seems like you and Naomi are really fighting.”
“We are. She doesn’t get her act together before I have to go hang with the Dingo, she’s persona non grata in this Embassy.”
“Um, she’s marrying your best friend.”
“Sucks to be her, then. He’ll still have to come here all the time. She won’t be allowed. Ever.”
“I know you’re angry with her attitude,” Gower said. “We’ve all been dealing with it for months. But I don’t understand why you’re so angry, Kitty.”
“Maybe you all don’t. Here’s the deal. I’ve seen a lot of people die in front of me over the past three days. Santiago died while I was holding his hand. Edmund Brewer fell to the ground pretty much at my feet. Representative Juvonic died on the floor of Rayburn House, in front of me. And Eugene Montgomery had his head blown off while I was standing next to him.”
“I can understand why that’s upsetting,” Gower said soothingly.
“Yeah. And now my husband and yours are off on missions, and the rest of us are about to be. All of those missions have danger attached to them. And your sister made the unfortunate decision to whine about being asked to lead the team that gets to sit inside the Embassy, in our large yet cozy kitchen, and look for clues that we might be able to find in dead people’s trash.”
White cleared his throat and Gower and Abigail turned to look at him. “Yes, Uncle Richard?” Abigail said hopefully.