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Tender Is The Night(4)

By:Barbara Freethy


"So you've got a hero complex."

"I don't have a complex anything," she said with a frown. "That incident  was the seed of my motivation, but over the years I took time to figure  out what I wanted to do with my life."

"It doesn't sound like you considered other options."

"I did, but law enforcement called to me. It wasn't just Melissa's  kidnapping that influenced me. The Callaways are big on public service.  All the kids are raised with the idea that it's important to give back,  to serve the community, and I thought the FBI would be a great fit for  me. I wasn't wrong. I'm good at what I do, and I like it."

"So now you're living the dream," he said dryly, waving his hand at the striptease going on at the other end of the room.

"At the moment, I'm living your dream, not mine," she retorted. "Why did  you want to be an agent, Devin? And before you say you had no reason,  let me remind you that I could also probably figure it out in about  fifteen minutes, too, so why not save me the time?"

"My dad was FBI," he said. "I went into the family business."         

     



 

"Really?" Surprise filled her gaze. "I didn't know that."

"Hal didn't give you my file?"

"He only gave me the case file, not yours, and no one mentioned to me that you were a legacy agent."

"My father died when I was fourteen. That was twenty years ago. Only a few people at the Bureau would remember him now."

"And one of those few is Hal Roman?"

He nodded. "My father was Hal's mentor. They were good friends. Hal encouraged me to follow in my dad's footsteps."

"Now I understand why Hal wanted me to help you."

"If he really wanted to help me, he would have sent someone more  experienced." He lifted the bottle of beer to his lips, wondering how  the conversation had gotten so personal. It was his fault. He'd pressed  Kate for information, and she'd come right back at him. He'd learned one  thing about her. Despite what she'd told him, she did want to be a hero  and while that wasn't necessarily bad, sometimes it was dangerous, and  sometimes he was guilty of the same desire.

Like maybe now …

He shoved that thought out of his head. He didn't want to be a hero. He wanted to get justice, which was completely different.

He straightened in his seat as his subject walked through the door.  Russell Walton wore a navy blue suit, a maroon-striped silk tie knotted  around his neck. He fit right in with the other businessmen looking for  after-work entertainment.

"Is that him?" Kate asked.

He nodded, taking out his phone and placing it on the table, so he was ready to take the shots he would need.

Russell walked down toward the stage and took a seat at an empty table  right in front. He ordered a drink, then took out a bill and placed it  in the dancer's thong as she shook her ass in his face.

"Looks like he's here to play," Devin murmured. "Hopefully with someone besides the talent."

"What if no one else comes? Maybe he just comes here to watch the show and then goes home."

"If that's the case, I'll tell his wife that." He discreetly snapped a  few shots of Russell at his empty table. "But I don't think he's going  to be alone for long. His credit card receipts appeared to be for more  than one person." He'd no sooner finished speaking when a woman walked  into the bar. She hesitated in the dark entry as if she were looking for  someone, and then she made her way down to Russell's table.

Russell got up, took her hand and kissed her on the cheek. Then they sat down at the table.

"Wow, that was hot," Kate said dryly. "I think I'm going to need another drink to cool me off."

He frowned at her mocking smile. "It's early yet." But as he watched the  two talk, it struck him that there was something off about the way they  were sitting, talking, smiling at each other.

"She's not having an affair with him," Kate said. "She's not acting intimate."

"Maybe she needs a drink to warm up."

"No, she's not looking at him like a lover-more like a conspirator."

"Which would back up an affair."

"Or something else."

As much as he hated to admit Kate might be right, he couldn't deny that  his own instincts were telling him exactly the same thing.

"Women lean toward the men they're sleeping with," Kate continued. "They  put their hand on their lover's arm or their leg. They give their man a  little smile as if they're remembering what went on the night before or  the last time they were together."

"Did they teach you that at Quantico?"

"They didn't have to. I'm a woman. I know when a woman is interested in a  man in a sexual way and that is not the case with those two."

He wanted to disagree, but he couldn't. Instead, he snapped the woman's  photo, and then ran it through an app on his phone for facial  recognition. It wasn't as in-depth as what the police department or the  FBI could do, but if the woman's face had been on the Internet in the  past few months, the app would pick her out.

A moment later, he had more than one result. "Lily Holbright, owner of Lily Bright Beauty Products-whatever that is."

"It's a hot new makeup company. Lily Holbright is a former makeup artist  to the stars. My sister, Annie, is a big fan of the products. She gives  me something every year to encourage me to wear more makeup."

Looking at Kate's clear skin, bright blue eyes, and naturally pink lips,  he didn't think she needed anything to enhance her beauty, but what did  he know? Maybe it was all a makeup illusion.

Kate glanced toward the couple by the stage. "I wonder if Lily knows  Russell's wife. You said Brenda Walton sells beauty products. They're in  the same industry. But I still don't think Russell and Lily are having  an affair. So what else could they be doing together? And why would they  be doing it here?"         

     



 

Kate's questions echoed his own. He had to admit she was a quick thinker.

As Lily got up and headed toward the restrooms, Kate said, "I think I'll use the restroom, too."

"Don't talk to her. I don't want you to scare her off."

"Don't worry. I know what I'm doing."

Kate was already out of her chair and walking across the room before he could think of a good reason to call her back.

He turned his attention to Russell. The man pulled out his phone and  appeared to text someone with a smile of satisfaction. Then he set the  phone down and smiled up at the woman seductively dancing on the stage  in front of him. Whatever Russell was up to, the man was clearly  enjoying the show. He didn't seem to be aware of anything but the  half-naked woman in front of him.

Acting on instinct, Devin got up and walked toward Russell's table.  Russell didn't even glance in his direction. It was child's play to  pocket Russell's phone on his way to the bar. As he waited for the  bartender, he glanced back at Russell. The man was so caught up in the  woman in front of him, he hadn't a clue his phone was gone.

But his inattention was about to end. Lily was almost back to the table, Kate following a few feet behind.

Kate met his gaze, tipped her head and walked toward the door. He followed her out of the club and across the street to the car.

"So, I might be able to help you," Kate said, giving him a proud smile as he got into the car and closed the door.

"How's that? Did you hear something?"

"Yes. Lily had a conversation in the hallway outside the ladies' room.  She said she had a deal and that by the end of the week there would be  no more competition and that Brenda Walton was done. Maybe there's more  information on her phone." Kate pulled out a phone and put it on the  console between them. "I accidentally bumped into her on my way out of  the ladies' room."

He raised an eyebrow. "You stole her phone? You think the Bureau would approve of that?"

"I don't know about the Bureau but you said we were operating under your rules tonight, so I didn't think you'd care."

"I don't." He put Russell's phone down next to hers. "I got his, too."

Kate stared back at him in surprise, then smiled. "Well, how about that? We might make a good team after all."

"Don't get carried away."

"Hey, I just broke a law to help you. At least, you can say thank-you."

"We may not be able to get into her phone."

"Well, in addition to getting the phone, I also just told you what she  said, that she and Russell are conspiring to destroy Brenda. That's more  than you got by just grabbing Russell's phone."

"Fine. I can say this: You might not be the worst person Hal could have sent to help me."

She laughed. "Well, I can say this: You are definitely the worst person  Hal could have sent me to help. You have been nothing but rude and  ungrateful since I walked into your office."

"If your skin is that thin-"

"It's not. But that doesn't mean I can't call out bad behavior."

"Look, if you want someone to throw you a parade when you do something right-that's not me. But … "