Cheesecake
- 2 years ago
- 37
- 0
Eons ago, Walker and I were having a Saturday lunch at the Unicorn Club. Back then it was tottering its way toward the rocky shoals of Chapter 11. Before Bear and Vanessa took over and saved us from BK ignominy.
Walker and I had ordered hot dogs — butterflied and grilled. We were seated at a table in the bar section. He was at that age where he had recently noticed the woman he was living with was a living, breathing person. With boobs. Something other than just a mom.
I’m sure he believed his chest glances were surreptitious. Of course he was about as subtle as a dumpster fire. Okay, maybe I should have worn a bra under my silky white tee.
Then Walker sucked in his breath, staring over my shoulder. I glanced around. A friend of mine, Millicent — Millie — was performing fellatio on a bottle of Corona. To the delight of three boisterous lads.
Walker leaned forward, all earnestness and curiosity and excitement, “Winter.”
“Yes, baby.”
“Is that ... sex?”
His cheeks were red. Embarrassment mingled with awe.
I leaned forward, face-to-face. Oops, cleavage. Serious C. I whispered, “Yes it is, honeybunch. I mean she’s just pretending to suck a cock. She’s teasing the boys.”
He lifted his eyes from my boobs, stared at me in wonder. “Is it wrong? I mean you wouldn’t...”
“Of course not. I’m a mother. A professional detective. Licensed by the state of Missouri. Oh good, here’s lunch.”
I took the butterflied hot dog out of the ciabatta bun, folded it back into a cylinder and, looking my son in his baby-blues, started sucking. Bobbing my head up and down, “Mmm.”
Much as I’d like to go directly at Hugh Macklin, I’d learned from Matt Striker that attacking the head could be counterproductive. Miss the target, and you’ve alerted him. Smarter, tougher people could be brought in as extra protective layers.
The New Jersey raid had missed the target, but Hugh Macklin himself had not been mentioned in the warrant. Was he aware of it? Of course; the man is a brilliant tactician. For now, he seemed content to let underlings remain on the front lines.
Besides his natural sense of the street, Matt had formally studied with cultural anthropologists and learned that crosscut targeting could be more productive than hitting the top guy. Like taking out the heir apparent, in this case his daughter, Grace. But she seemed ... peripheral.
Grace Macklin was constantly on the road — shooting, or directing, a documentary on American healthcare. Primarily, according to industry gossip, its many weaknesses as evinced through the community hospital system.
While healthcare tied in — ironically in her case — with the pharmaceutical field, Grace had little direct involvement with Triple-I. She did have a seat on Macklin’s Board, but as a non-voting member. She had very little day-today involvement with her father’s company.
There were key VPs — Research, Development, Distribution, Finance, Marketing — but no one in particular that Macklin appeared to be grooming.
I didn’t study the organization charts the way Gloria and Constance did, but I agreed with their assessment — Security seemed to be the obvious lever into the Executive Suite.
I’d spent, off and on, almost two weeks planning my next break-in. My break-in at Fowler Crescent, at the cul-de-sac where Drake Fowler and four of his former Army buddies lived. Five houses, heavily-gated entrance, security cameras and alarms up the wazoo. As we say in surveillance-speak.
My bet would be that the five men would be over-reliant on their perimeter defense. We’ll see. My second bet was that I would feel my cell vibrate if Fowler were coming home. We’ll see about that too.
Not for the first time, my plans included sex. And a favor from Ash Collins.
DC again. Constance Grayson seemed almost bemused at my scheme. I gave her the barest hint of an outline — Matt had told me many times she didn’t want to know operational details. But I had to share enough to interest her, to enlist her, in helping me with Ash.
I’d overthought it. Constance was more than happy to go along. She was as frustrated as I had been when the Missouri National Guard investigation led us nowhere. Nowhere that any savvy prosecutor would take to court.
She exchanged phone pleasantries with Ash. Then, “Can you meet with Winter? Ten minutes, anytime today.”
The tall, elegant black man seemed genuinely pleased to see me. We’d been through a few things together. “How can the weight and majesty of the Federal Bureau of Investigation be of service to Winter Jennings?”
Sarcasm. No, gentler than that — sardonicism.
I gave him a bare-bones overview. Ash listened like Daddy does — fully engaged, intensely focused.
He smiled, beamed really, “Have I got the man for you. Agent Clint Callahan. New Yorker, New York Agent. He’ll love it. Best of all, he’s sharp. Won’t overplay his role. Won’t go all diva on you.”
“Tell me about him.”
“Quiet guy, but he delivers. Wouldn’t be in the New York office otherwise. He’s a Supervisory Special Agent. Which in our rat’s nest of an organization chart means he’s just one rank below the Assistant Special Agent-in-Charge.”
Boy, am I glad I had my own little company.
Ash trusted Clint Callahan. Agent Clint Callahan. So I did too. At some point in any major case, a leap of faith was required. Careful research, due diligence, Sullivan probes, endless strategy meetings ... all of that got me only so far.
I was now working on my fourth break-in in four nights. Rowley, Rowley, Nowak ... Fowler.
Agent Callahan and I were noshing on Junior’s cheesecake. Flatbush Avenue. A Brooklyn cliché, but a very tasty one. I went with Dulce De Leche Caramel. His slice was Boston Cream Pie. Cheesecake of course. The waitress had smiled at our order. Good choices. Of course they’d smile if you ordered strychnine.
One week before Fowler Crescent.
He looked steadily at me, “Ash says you’re good people.”
“Okay.”
“You married?”
“Yes.”
“Fool around?”
“No.” Fingers crossed. Metaphorically. He was wearing a gold wedding band.
Callahan was around 40, maybe a little under. Thick, from the shoulders down. Like he had put some Idaho into himself over the years. But I didn’t think he was soft. Mentally or physically. He was around six feet, probably 200 pounds. Nice looking, chiseled features, but ... I don’t know ... hard.
“Tell me about what you want.”
“Deep background or... ?”
“Hum the melody, I’ll pick up the lyrics.”
“I want to creep the house of the Deputy Director of Security at INTERNATIONAL INNOVATIONS INCUBATOR.”
“Sixth Avenue.”
“Right. Here’s where he lives, Queens.” I pinched my map open.
Callahan adjusted it, zoomed in and out, right and left. Handed my cell back without comment.
I eyed the menu. Our harried waitress, snood, refilled our coffee. “Anything else?”
My plate was half full. “Check back later.”
Callahan looked at me, “You’re from Kansas.”
“No!” Tone it down, Winter. “Kansas City, that’s on the Missouri side.” I started to tell him about John Jay; decided not to. Callahan didn’t need to be impressed, even if I could. Which I doubted.
He peered at me steadily, penetrating green eyes, “Tell me about Fowler.”
“Army MP in Iraq. Came back home with some money and started his own security firm. Specialized in startups. Had a stint at Citi, then Macklin hired him for Triple-I.”
Short. Succinct. Professional.
“What’s your plan?”
I told Callahan about the four other guys in Fowler Crescent. “Former Army buddies of Fowler. Two work at Triple-I, the others are still at Citi.”
“All in security?”
“Yes.”
When I got to the whores that the Fab Four had ordered in the previous Tuesday, Callahan grinned. Now we were getting to it.
He said, “Let me guess. You followed the hookers back to their crib.”
“Apartment building out by LaGuardia. All four live there. Share a pimp.”
I showed Callahan a photo of a natty looking black guy in a loose-fitting seersucker. “Jackson Greene, with an ‘e’. He’s 28, a grad student at NYU. Economics.”
Callahan leaned back in the booth, looked at something far in the distance. Possibly thinking of mankind’s stupidity. Grad student at one of the finest schools in the country running whores. The waitress cruised by. I made a circular motion over our plates. Callahan drifted back to Junior’s. “Switch ‘em.”
A man after my own ... tummy.
He looked into my eyes again, “Tell me.”
“Greene drives them to Crescent Fowler, that’s what I call the cul-de-sac.”
He nodded impatiently, get to it, lady.
“It’s a van — a new GMC Savana 2500.”
Callahan nodded again, “Can seat up to 12. More if you crowd ‘em in.”
“It’s black.”
“Okay, what you want from me?”
The Boston Cream Pie was almost as good as my first choice. “I want to know when the next ... delivery is. And I want to be in that van.”
“Okay. We can deal with that. I’ll look into Mr. Greene.”
I reached into my yellow leather shoulder bag, handed him the Greene folder. “Preliminary research. Jessie and Jesse Sullivan. They consult with the FBI in Kansas City.”
“Missouri.”
“Missouri.”
He read through the two sheets. “Pretty thorough.” He had an air of quiet competency about him.
He looked up at me, “Can you do frump?”
I hid my smile. Tough New Yorker worried about my safety.
“Yes. Very well.” My Mildred Hawkins get-up was still in Matt’s garage. Gray-streaked wig, fake dugs, compression stockings. Old woman’s clothes. I wouldn’t need the tattoos. I could do the wrinkles myself. The slump, the slight limp.
“You sure?”
“Very.”
Callahan called me while I was back in DC. Packing up Mildred Hawkins.
“I can go in hard or soft.”
Jackson Greene.
“Which do you recommend?”
“I’d start with soft. Offer him some cash. A thou.”
“Fine, I’ll be back in New York this evening.”
Clint Callahan was very ... precise in handling money. I handed him an envelope with $1,000 for Jackson Greene. Clint carefully wrote out a receipt for me. Signed it, had me countersign his copy.
I twitted him, “Very professional.”
He shrugged and those massive shoulders threatened to split his blazer, “I don’t fuck with internal investigations. ICU. Triple-I is an international company.”
“ICU?”
“Internal Corruption Unit. Nobody messes with them.”
Okay, but I had a slight suspicion that Callahan was a closet straight-arrow.
It had gone down like this.
Callahan had two young agents pluck Jackson Greene from the NYU campus.
Callahan smiled at me, “Scared the fuck out of him.”
“Good.”
“We parked him in an observation room. Left him alone for almost eleven hours.”
I nodded.
“Greene tried to go coolio. We ignored him. Then he tried anger. Screaming about the Constitution. We ignored him.” This wasn’t Callahan’s first steer-wrestling event.
“Around midnight I sent in one of the secretaries; been with us about 75 years. Hair up in a bun, steel-rimmed glasses, friendly as an IRS auditor. She told Greene, “Homeland Security is coming up from DC. Don’t say another word.”
I could just picture the scene. Greene strolling across the campus to attend a lecture on the economic effects of global antitrust policies. Two grim-faced men flash IDs, grab him by both arms and hustle him into a waiting van. No conversation, no Miranda, just “Homeland Security, come with us.”
Callahan told me, “They took him to the Metropolitan Correction Center.”
In lower Manhattan. I’d been there while at John Jay. Known, in some circles, as the Guantanamo of New York
Then Greene was left to stew. And stew.
In a way, I could almost work up some sympathy for him. One individual caught up in the grand maw of Homeland Security. Not unknown for its horrific civil rights violations in the name of anti-terrorism.
But this fucker was a pimp. Exploiting weak women. Plus I needed him to get me into Fowler Crescent. Bespoke ethics again.
L’affaire Greene had been a mere blip on the FBI’s day. One of dozens of chores. It had been an ordeal for the prisoner, but took only about ten minutes of Callahan’s time.
“I waltzed into the room. Turned on the camera, read him his rights, told him everything was being recorded. He asked to go to the bathroom. I told him after he signed the affidavit.” Callahan grinned, used a lower register voice, “Under oath or penalty of perjury.”
Affidavit?
Callahan handed me a signed sheet with an embossed seal on it. I ran my finger over the seal. “One of the secretary’s a notary for Prudential Real Estate on weekends. More money there than in law enforcement.”
I scanned the document. Take out the legal mumbo, and jumbo, and Jackson Greene had signed a written confession to consorting with four men suspected of terrorist ties. Organization and foreign country not mentioned.
I said, “You got him.”
“You do. Here’s your thousand back. This was more fun.”
I signed another receipt.
We were having a no-reason celebratory dinner at the Unicorn Club. New sconces — Uni pranced up on his hind hooves like a rodeo stallion — held customer-flattering LED bulbs. As per my original logo design, Uni’s erection matched his horn in girth and length.
It was around ten on a Friday evening, so the dining room was starting to slow down as the bar became more boisterous. Although it was a contained gaiety under the watchful eye of our major-domo, Lucy Cuthbert.
Pilar looked at Gertie, “Do you think Uni models would sell?”
Gertie turned to check out the sconce behind her. Pulled Uni’s cock down to turn the light off. Pushed it back up. “Maybe. Or maybe sell the sconces themselves.”
Bess Cuthbert, pert and sassy, came to our table followed by two lesser waiters. They parceled out an array of Gullah dishes — Lowcountry cuisine with recipes going back hundreds of years. Going back to West Africa and the slaves who brought their beloved traditions with them.
Stewed veggies, oyster rice, conch stew, slow-cocked perloo, tomato-based okra soup. Peanut cake for dessert.
Bess put her hand on Walker’s shoulder, “Come upstairs, my man, I’ll take sweet care of you.”
Pilar shrugged, “Help yourself.”
Walker tried to casual it, tried to pretend that two girls fighting over him was, yawn, an everyday occurrence. The two lesser waiters, tasks completed, departed.
Vanessa warned, “Be careful, Pilar, be very careful.”
Another shrug, “No biggie.”
Bess winked at Pilar, “That’s not what I heard.”
She sashayed off to torment some other boys just as two couples in four red MAGA caps burst inside the Unicorn, laughing uproariously. They headed straight to the bar, the women still giggling.
Pilar started to say something, closed her mouth. Looked down at her plate. Walker patted her thigh. But the caps reminded her, “Gertie, have you read that Woodward book everyone is talking about?”
“Yeah, friend sent me her advance copy.”
“What did you think?”
“He said, she said.”
Vanessa said, “But he’s been covering the White House for like 50 years.”
I said, “Two Pulitzer Prizes.”
“He said, she said.”
Vanessa, “What about that anonymous editorial in the Times? The White House insider spilling the beans?”
I said, “The ‘lodestar’ clue.”
“He said, she said.”
Of course Gertie wasn’t about to ignore the opportunity for a lesson. “Look around you, Pilar. The Unicorn demographic is white. Membership about evenly divided, male and female. Average age is 34.5.”
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Here is talking not me, but one girl about her winter nude experience.In the middle of December my friend suddenly proposed that I could ski nude. My first reaction was: what are you talking about!? But then very quickly I realized that it is good idea. I can't explain why I liked it but when that day came when we drove to the ski center, I was overexcited and I really had irresistible desire to go there nude and start to skiing. All my life I had always proper clothing according to weather and...
"Master, more slowly go! I pray you, less haste!" Ranulf reined in impatiently under the frost-rimed trees, brushing his red hair back from his forehead. The cold was growing more intense as they plunged ever deeper into the forest. His squire's hissing speech was slurred as the cold slowed all his bodily functions. "We'll make camp as soon as we find a place that gives us any shelter. That I promise." His voice was brusk but not unkind. The lizard man had served him well in his...
Pilar: “Guy walks into a bar and is shocked to see a horse behind the bar.” Walker: “Horse says, ‘What’s the matter? You can’t believe that a horse can tend bar?’” Pilar: “No. I just can’t believe the ferret sold the place.” Alicia Collins called me from New York. “Bear told you.” “Yes. Have to admit it shocked me. Vanessa too. And the kids.” “I’m sorry I didn’t say anything. But I felt it was Bear’s news to share.” “No, I understand. And he would have wanted to be the one to tell...
Walker: “A rabbi, a priest, and a Lutheran minister walk into a bar.” Pilar: “Is this some kind of joke?” Walker and Pilar, holding hands, bowing, “Thank you, thank you. This ends our Kansas City engagement.” xxxxxxxxxx Douglas ‘Duke’ Arlington. A new trial, his second, for the murder of Gustav Hindenburg in Ft. Payne, Alabama. Different courtroom, different judge, different jurors, different defense attorneys. New evidence. Ned Daniels and Hilary Dunne would reprise their prosecutor...
For some reason, crime in America follows railroad tracks. And Kansas City has plenty of both. My first, and I hope last, shootout took place near my office in the Stockyards. Besides gunplay, it involved ramming my bright red F-150 into a larger Dodge Ram. The Ford Motorcar Company told me, and I verified it through an independent mechanic, that the frame had been wrenched out of shape. It could be straightened, but wouldn’t drive the same, not really. I sat down with Vanessa and Gertie...
The new year had passed long ago on Earth, but our start of the new year was just another day on Arbor. The Arborian New Year started on the first day of spring, the vernal equinox. I chose that propitious day to deal with the alaspore and its master. I wove a new trick out of something Cor showed me how to do using the wind. I wove a cocoon out of moving air as she had shown me. I was able to use it, as she did, as a method of transportation, but I couldn't become the wind as she could, so...
Saturday morning breakfast, Walker and Gregory in charge of provisioning. Vanessa smiled at Pilar, “Is Walker still servicing himself?” Sucking his own cock. “Sometimes. Depends on what I’m in the mood for.” Gregory turned to Vanessa, not one whit of embarrassment, “I can’t suck it yet, but I can lick the very tip. Pilar thinks I’ll be able to if I keep practicing.” Vanessa gave him her glorious smile, ‘How often do you practice, honey?” “Every night when I’m home.” Pilar said, “I have...
I woke late and lingered over my campfire and my breakfast. It would take only a half day's riding to get to where I was going, and anytime today would be a fine time with me. The skies had cleared again and it was nice to wait for the chill of the night to abate before setting out. Deak seemed to appreciate it, along with the relaxed pace. He tossed his head now and then and nickered at me softly when he did. Perhaps, like me, he was chasing Vulkai cobwebs out of his mind. Remembering my...
He smiled as the sentence was handed down, Arthur Edward Winter, you have been brought before this court, for a charge of: - Well perhaps it`s not relevant here and to spare his blushes we won`t go into it, but the sentence was seven years, that’s the bit he got loud and clear. And, it must be said, so did his wife, tall willowy and dour Jenny Winter, sat up in the gallery, her face a mask of total disgust, mostly at her husband for getting caught and of course for the fact she would be on her...
Clint called, “Any New York plans yet?” “Remember Vanessa? Tall, good looking. Married.” “I’ll throw in a set of steak knives.” Click. Hey! I’m the one supposed to be hanging up. We invited Cathal Conway and family for Sunday brunch. Riles went with Walker and Pilar back to their room. She may be only 10, but the kids treat her as an equal. Jorge and Javier immediately started roughhousing with Hobo. The Proper Villain jumped up on Juanita’s lap. Cathal accepted his glass of Jamison —...
My mother called me. At work. First Autumn, now ... Flora Jennings. “Winter, can you come by?” Mom knew I worked, had my own office. But since I was no longer with the KCPD, nor employed by a real company, she simply hadn’t accepted that I do anything worthwhile. In fact, after Reggie left me, and before Vanessa married me, my mother regarded me as ... sad. A loser. Couldn’t keep a man, couldn’t find a real job. So it didn’t surprise me that she would expect me to drop whatever...
I was spending hours with the diminutive, scarlet-haired Sullivan twins, bleary-eyed from the grainy security tapes. Duplicating what more competent investigators with the KCPD were doing. At home, at dinner, I tried to wear a game face for Walker. He had lost Mindy to California, to Stanford, to a more age-appropriate life. I had lost my friend, Mary Packer, but I was determined not to let the gloom prevail. After working all day on her dream restaurant, Euforia, Vanessa was overseeing the...
Robert ‘Bobsy’ Atwater, as part of his three-patent sale to Hayes-Harris, the venture capital company, became an employee there. He wasn’t a partner, but he was one of seven on the Executive Evaluation team. He sat in on presentations from individuals and companies looking for investment capital. Hayes-Harris took small fliers and big risks, tiny positions and majority ownership. They provided money when they were interested. And money, expertise, guidance, even personnel, when they were...
I sent Clint some suggestions for the name of our firm. For incorporation purposes, he would be the equivalent of a CEO, but no one seemed to be interested in titles. To the clients, potential clients, each one of us would be the Indian Chief in our home town. As for a corporate name, I was leaning toward Winter Jennings & Associates, LLC. A second stolen print ended up for sale in Omaha, then a third in Des Moines. Little Rock, Denver, St. Louis. I push-pinned a map and noted that...
Clint spoke softly, “Does he have a gun?” “No, not in the basement. I don’t think.” Our first words. Clint bundled me in his arms and carried me back inside. He sat me gently on a hall bench and flicked the safety off on his Sig Sauer. Even in my panicked state, I registered his new P320. And I also became conscious of the anguished howls coming up from the basement. Clint opened the door cautiously. He didn’t look away from the stairwell as he asked me, “What did you do to...
It was the day before our expedition to Pickering was due to set off. Kelly, Kirsty, Kat and I were going and we were taking Will Hinds, Harry Wilton and Emma. Jim Bolton was also coming with us. Although he was now quite frail he wanted to feel useful and his military experience would be good for Will and Harry. He still had sharp eyes and would stay with the train on lookout duty. Katie and her group were all travelling and we would use both engines, with the same make up of carriages as...
At noon on Thursday, Miss Thompson's presence was requested at the principal's office. She arrived to discover a parent seated opposite the principal, dressed conservatively but expensively, with conservative but expensive jewellery. The wedding rings on her hand were expensive, elegant but not ostentatious. The contrast between her and the two educators, both of whom were wearing runners, ankle socks and minor jewellery, could not have been more strong. The Principal herself had decided to...
Meredith Daulton was running around her house yelling. They’d been given the evacuation order a few minutes ago. The Ranch wildfire was coming and they had twenty minutes to get out.Paul Caruso was packing both the car with computers, legal papers, and some clothes.“My jewelry, “Meredith screamed as she threw a bag at him. “I need that, it’s valuable.”“Is it insured?”“Of course it is...”“Then you don’t need it. I said clothes now, get in the fucking car and let’s GO!”She snatched the bag from...
Love StoriesAs the bright, invasive afternoon sunlight came streaming through my stained (with dust and dirt) glass window, I found myself spooning (and possibly forking) with my new dream girl, Winter Summer, whom I had met earlier at the Public Market. Rubbing my aching jaw from our earlier sexcapades, fearing I might have lockjaw then grinning like an escaped lunatic as I recalled her hairy pussy, suddenly so afraid she might be a werewolf I had to rush out to buy silver bullets (the ammo, not that...
HumorThe day began like all others, climbing out of bed at the crack of noon, devouring a Toaster Strudel and mayonnaise sandwich before braving the crisp Canadian weather by going to Vancouver's Public Market for fresh seafood now that I'm eating healthy. Along the way I passed a group of American hipsters vaping cannabis oil on a street corner, celebrating Tommy Chong's birthday. Damn Americans! Since Trump's election, they have flocked here like a silverfish infestation. Silverfish, that...
HumorNina sat idly flicking through a few magazines while she was waiting for her appointment with the dentist. For the last three years, she and her mates had hit Southern California beaches, where they swam, surfed, danced and drank themselves silly for about three weeks solid.This year Nina wanted something different, a much more relaxing and hopefully a more romantic setting place to visit. She closed her eyes for a moment, maybe somewhere with a lake, mountains, spa, hiking trails, and clear...
Seduction>?> > The coach just returned from his winter retreat with his special > boys. All the boys on the team want to go on the winter retreat of course, > but the coach only selects the very best. The boys who have maintained > strict control and discipline over their exercises and development. No boy > who has shot a load in the last six months gets to go on the winter retreat. > No boy who has spoken to a girl gets to go on the retreat. Only boys who are > totally focused and dedicated to the...
It was the first week of October 2013, I was working in the garden of my cottage on the edge of the Yorkshire Wolds near the coast. I hate gardening, always have done, but after last winter when potatoes reached £120 a pound on the black market, I decided that turning the garden, and a bit of the field behind the garden, with the agreement of the farmer who owned it, into a large vegetable patch was prudent. I was lifting the last of my potato crop and storing them for use during the winter....
I eyeballed Sandy Seaver two different ways. From the stands in The K and by tailing him. My first time in a baseball stadium. It was a revelation. An expensive revelation if I’d been paying for everything. Parking, tickets, food, beer. The little magazine that tells you ... um, baseball stuff. And, if I’d had little kids ... all those treats and souvenirs and whatever else they needed. I bet a family of four couldn’t get out of the park for under a couple of hundred bucks. But the scene...
The kids were hunched over the kitchen table moving black and white stones around a board. Gertie, sipping her Tanqueray, was watching with interest. I said, “What’s this?” Walker, shoehorning pity into a single word — a feat that only a teenager who had a slow mother could master — said, “Go.” I swatted the back of his head, “I know that, dumbbell, why are you playing Go?” Pilar, not looking up, said, “Gertie said that when AlphaGo beat Ke Jie, it was China’s Sputnik moment.” Walker,...
Two parallel investigations — sometimes intersecting, sometimes intertwined. The FBI, supervised by Ash Collins, was focused primarily on illegal weapons — manufacturing and sales. And chasing the gun money, possibly diamonds, around the world. Matt Striker, reporting to Constance Grayson, was all things Meriwether. Their PAC, their possible connections to Wexler and Hoffstatter. And, just maybe their connections to diamonds. I was, for now, relegated to the sidelines. Impatiently so. Ash...
American Snapshot: In Montana it is illegal to guide sheep onto a railroad track with the intent of damaging the train. Vanessa and I agreed to bring Walker and Pilar back home. We couldn’t hide them forever, although Rebecca Montgomery was enjoying their company enormously. But school. Friends. Life. An FBI agent was still posted in the Wrigley lobby. Gunther wouldn’t be able to board the elevator even if he were foolish enough, or desperate enough, to return for another try. Nor would...