“You’re getting warm . . . warmer,” she sighed, and laughed very deep in her throat.
Then we slid back off the bed and stood together, swaying and touching. Finally I took off her bra and held her breasts in my hands. “Like I said, I don’t know how much more of this I can take.”
I didn’t, either. I was hard, so hard that it hurt. I slid down and knelt on the Oriental rug. I kissed Jamilla down there. She was strong and confident, and maybe that’s why I liked kneeling before her like this. In awe? Out of respect? Something like that.
Finally I pushed myself up again. “Okay?” I whispered.
“Okay. Whatever you say. I’m your slave. Your master? A little of each?”
I went inside Jamilla while we were still standing, dancing in place, but then we tilted down and dropped onto the bed. I was lost in the moment, lost in Jamilla Hughes, and that was exactly where I needed to be. She was making these tiny sighs and gasps that I loved.
“I missed being with you,” I whispered. “I missed your smile, the sound of your voice, everything.”
“Ditto,” she said, and laughed. “But especially that tat of yours.”
Moments later, five, maybe ten minutes, the phone on the nightstand began to ring.
For once, I did the right thing—I knocked the damn thing onto the floor, then covered it with a pillow. If it was the Wolf, he could call back in the morning.
Chapter 101
THE NEXT MORNING I headed back to the Idaho Rockies. Jamilla and I shared a cab out to the airport, then took separate planes going in different directions. “Big mistake. Dumb move,” she told me before we parted. “You should just fly to San Francisco with me. You need some extended R and R.” I already knew that.
But it wasn’t going to be. Corky Hancock was the biggest lead we had, and the surveillance on him had been tightening. There was nowhere Hancock could go in the state of Idaho and not be watched, or at least listened to. There was surveillance on his house, the surrounding acreage, even the stand-alone barn. We had four mobile teams on him, with four more in the wings if needed. Since I’d left, aerial surveillance had been added to the mix.
In Idaho, I attended a meeting of more than two dozen agents assigned to the detail. The meeting was held in a small movie house in Sun Valley. The movie 21 Grams with Sean Penn and Naomi Watts was playing there in the evenings, but not during the day.
Senior Agent William Koch stood in front of us. Tall and gangly, impressive in his way, he wore a chambray shirt, jeans, scuffed black cowboy boots. He played the local guy to a T, but he was nobody’s fool and he wanted us to know it. The same was true for his CIA counterpart, Bridget Rooney, a confident, dark-haired woman who was smarter than a whip.
“I’ll make this pretty simple for everybody. Either Hancock knows we’re here or he’s just unbelievably careful by nature,” said Koch. “He hasn’t talked to anybody since we got here. He’s been online—eBay for fishing rods, a couple of porn sites, a fantasy baseball league. He has a girlfriend named Coral Lee, who lives nearby in Ketchum. Asian American girl. Coral is definitely a good looker. Corky isn’t. We figured he probably spends lots of money on her, and it turns out, he does. Slightly less than two hundred thousand so far this year. Trips, jewelry, one of those cute little Lexus convertibles the gals like.”
Koch paused and looked around the room. “That’s about it. Except we know that Hancock is connected to the Wolf and that he’s been paid a lot of money for his services. So at twelve hundred hours, we’re going in to take a look for ourselves inside the house. So tired,” Agent Koch said in a singsong. “Tired of waiting.”
There were smiles around the room, even from those who didn’t get the reference to the Kinks song. Somebody patted me on the shoulder, as though I had something to do with the decision that must have come down from Washington.
“Not me.” I turned and shrugged at the agent congratulating me. “I’m just a soldier here.”
The team going inside Hancock’s place was mostly FBI, but there was a handful of CIA agents, too, led by Rooney. The CIA was in Idaho as a courtesy, partly because of the new working relationship that existed between the two agencies, but mostly because Hancock was directly involved in the murder of Thomas Weir, one of theirs. But I doubted they wanted to take Hancock down any more than I did. I wanted the Wolf, and somehow, somewhere, I was going to get him. At least, that was what I needed to think.
Chapter 102
KOCH AND ROONEY were in charge, and they finally gave us the go. At the appointed hour, we swarmed all over the Hancock house. FBI-emblazoned shirts and windbreakers were everywhere. Probably scared off a few deer and jackrabbits, even though not a single shot was fired.
Hancock was in bed with his girlfriend. He was sixty-four years old; Coral was supposed to be twenty-six. Lustrous black hair, good figure, lots and lots of rings and things, slept in the nude, on her back. Hancock at least had the decency to wear a Utah Jazz sweatshirt and sleep in a fetal position.
He began to shout at us, which was actually kind of ironic and funny. “What the hell is this shit? Get out of my damn house!”
But he forgot to look surprised, or he just wasn’t a good actor. Either way, I got the feeling that he knew we were coming. How? Because he’d spotted us over the past few days? Or had Hancock been warned by someone in one of the cooperating agencies? Did the Wolf know we were onto Hancock?
During the first couple of hours of interviews, we tried Dr. O’Connell’s truth serum on Hancock. It didn’t work as well on him as it had with Joe Cahill. He got happy and high, but he just sat back and went with it. Didn’t tell us much, wouldn’t even confirm things that Cahill had already confessed.
Meanwhile, a search of the house, barn, and sixty acres of grounds was going on. Hancock owned an Aston Martin convertible—and the Wolf loved fast cars—but nothing else even vaguely suspicious turned up. Not for three whole days, during which nearly a hundred agents combed every square inch of the ranch. During that time, half a dozen computer experts—including loaners from Intel and IBM—tried to break into Hancock’s two computers. They finally concluded that he’d had experts put up extra security to protect whatever was inside.
There was nothing to do but wait around some more. I read every magazine and newspaper in Hancock’s house, including several back issues of the Idaho Mountain Express. I went for long walks and tried to figure out a direction for my life that made some sense to me. I didn’t do real well, but the fresh mountain air was a nice treat for my lungs.
When a computer breakthrough finally came, there wasn’t much to go on. No direct link to the Wolf or to anyone else who seemed suspicious to us, at least not at first.
The next day, though, a hacker from our offices in Austin, Texas, found a file inside an encrypted file. It contained regular communication with a bank in Zurich. Actually, with a couple of banks in Switzerland.