Lethal (Lee Coburn)
Page 84
“He is. But he called me today, wanted to know what the hell is going on down here and what I’m doing about it.”
Janice made a small sound of dismay. “He was checking up on you?”
“Essentially.”
“He’s got his nerve.” She pushed back her chair and indicated his untouched plate. “Are you going to eat that?”
“Sorry, no. It looks good, but…” He ended on a helpless shrug.
She carried his plate to the counter, cursing his predecessor under her breath. “If he didn’t think you were up to handling the job, why did he appoint you to the position?”
What Tom believed to be the answer to that was too humiliating to speak aloud, especially to Janice. She abhorred defeatism. She particularly abhorred it in her husband.
He said, “I don’t know where Hamilton got his information, probably from other agents in the office, but he must have noticed the same discrepancies in Coburn’s M.O. that I did. He even asked me if Coburn was an agent from my office working undercover at the trucking company.”
She sputtered a laugh, then sobered so quickly it was comical. “Was he?”
Tom gave her a crooked smile. “No. At least I didn’t place him there.” His smile slipped. “Someone in New Orleans who outranked me could have, I suppose. Or someone from another agency.”
“Without informing you?”
He merely shrugged, again not wanting to admit that he was inconsequential. Or at least was regarded so by coworkers.
She rejoined him at the table. “Hamilton has no right to interfere. Of course the man has an outrageous ego.”
“You’ve never even met him.”
“Based on everything you’ve told me about him, I doubt he could get his head through that door. It makes me mad as hell that he’s monitoring you.”
He decided against telling her that he wasn’t the only one in his office who had heard from Hamilton today. Many agents had disapproved of his appointment and had made no secret of it. But there were some who, either by word or general attitude, had demonstrated their support.
One of those agents, a data analyst, had confided in him today that others in the office had received calls from Hamilton. “For some reason,” she’d told Tom behind closed doors, “this case has showed up on Hamilton’s radar. He’s following it closely and asking questions about you.”
“What kind of questions?”
She had held up her hands, palms out. “I won’t get involved in office politics, Tom. I need this job. But I thought you should know that you’re being scrutinized.”
Tom had thanked her. For the rest of the day, he sensed whispering behind his back. Which may only have been his paranoia, but he didn’t think so. He resented Hamilton’s intrusion. Whatever the reason for it, it was insulting and worrisome.
He pushed back his chair and stood up. “I’d better get back.”
He left the kitchen before the troubling conversation could continue. He washed up in the powder room and retrieved his briefcase from the den. Janice met him at the back door with a sack lunch. “Emergency relief in case you need it. Peanut butter crackers and an apple.”
“Thanks.”
She didn’t kiss him this time, and he didn’t kiss her. But before he could turn away, she placed her hand on his arm. “You’re doing a good job, Tom. Don’t let Hamilton or anyone else browbeat you into thinking otherwise.”
He gave her a weak smile. “I won’t. The hell of it is, Hamilton’s right.”
“In what way?”
“Any fool fo
llowing this case would realize that it’s no ordinary kidnapping. In all likelihood, Mrs. Gillette witnessed Coburn shooting Fred Hawkins. Murderers don’t leave eyewitnesses. Coburn has a reason for keeping her alive.”
Chapter 24
Doral paid a dutiful visit to his mama.