Celia couldn’t argue. It was only a matter of time before one of these debacles got her hurt. But she could bargain. “I’ll stay there if Dad lets me into the West Corp archives.”
Her mother hissed out a breath that clearly said, Now isn’t the time for this argument. All the more reason to have it.
“Celia, this is too serious for you to be playing games like this.”
“I’ve never played games.”
“Then here, ask him yourself.” The phone rustled as Suzanne handed it over.
Warren’s gruff voice came on. “What’s going on?”
Suzanne hadn’t had a chance to tell him anything, so Celia had to explain it all.
“I’ve got a guess at the Strad Brothers’ next target. Since they’ll probably try a kidnapping along with it, Mom wants me to stay at the penthouse. I said I would if you let me into the West Corp archives. So how about it?”
“I don’t make deals, Celia—”
/> “Well, it was worth a try. I’ll see you later—”
“Don’t hang up!”
She didn’t.
He said, tiredly, “Can you just tell me why you want to see those files? Please?”
Enough of a pause preceded the please that Celia wondered if Suzanne had prompted him.
It didn’t matter. The please was enough. “I found evidence that suggests Simon Sito worked for West Corp about fifty years ago. I need to confirm that.”
“Simon Sito worked for my father?”
“It was a long time ago. He wasn’t crazy then. He wasn’t the Destructor.”
“If it’s true … what does it mean?”
She shrugged. “I hope I’ll find out when I see those records.”
He didn’t answer right away. She could hear him breathing, not talking. She could picture him and her mother looking at each other, having one of those silent conversations that longtime couples shared. She probably wouldn’t have been able to interpret their looks even if she’d been there, watching them.
Finally, Warren said, “I’ll make sure there’s a key card for you in the lobby.”
That was easier than she thought it would be. She hadn’t wanted to bring up Sito. She hadn’t known how her father would react. She hadn’t expected him to hold his temper. “Thank you.”
EIGHTEEN
AS she entered the lobby of West Plaza, she called up to the penthouse. No one answered. The Olympiad was already gone.
Damon Parks smiled a greeting and held up a plastic card to her. “Your father left this for you.”
Damn. She’d half-expected him to back out of his part of the agreement.
“You coming to work for him now?” he said.
“Who knows? He might be the only person in town who’ll hire me.”
“I doubt that. This mess of a trial will blow over soon enough. Especially if this sort of thing keeps up.” He held up the front page of the Eye, the issue that screamed that the Destructor was controlling the crime spree from prison. Parks clicked his tongue. “Good old Destructor, at it again.”
She frowned. “I don’t think it’s the Destructor. He’s in prison, out of commission. Someone else is behind this.”