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The Step Between




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  To Harriet and John Williams,

  Marshall and Veronica Thomas,

  Felicia Jeter, and Gregory Fraley:

  Thank you for demonstrating that indeed one can go home again.

  And

  To Peggy Blow, my guide on endless, seamless journeys.

  Acknowledgments

  Writing a book is, of necessity and by definition, a solitary pursuit. But that does not mean that the writer, if she is fortunate, walks alone; and I am lucky in the extreme. Thank you David Forrer, formerly of the Charlotte Sheedy Agency, and Roslyn Siegel, editor extraordinaire at Simon & Schuster, for being there every step of the way.

  1

  RUNNING THE RED LIGHT WAS easy, as effortless as jamming her foot down on the accelerator and engaging all eight of the engine’s cylinders, a rare and delightful departure from the routine of bumper-to-bumper city traffic. The turbo Saab made the transition as easily as Carole Ann made the split-second decision to risk the bold dash across Georgia Avenue at the intersection where Military Road changes into Missouri Avenue, despite the fact that traffic was dense in both directions. It was the third light she’d run since leaving the dojo in Bethesda, but that’s not what made the illegal scurry easy. The ease was brought about by the fact that the morning’s second illegal run had proved correct her suspicion that she was being followed. This third violation was designed to lose the bastard, and the lawyer in Carole Ann didn’t experience the slightest qualm or pang of guilt at her outlaw behavior.

  It was a white Range Rover. The driver was white and male and enigmatic behind ultradark, reflective aviator lenses. And that’s all she’d been able to discern, from the moment she’d first noticed him, when he made the turn behind her onto Connecticut Avenue twenty minutes ago. He’d been the one to run the light that time, and had incurred the horn-blowing wrath of a half-dozen Monday-morning road warriors, which is how and why she’d noticed him. He’d been with her, at three- or four-vehicle intervals, ever since. Every time she changed lanes to position herself for a look at the front license plate of the truck, its driver slowed almost to a halt and shifted lanes. He knew she knew he was there and seemed intent only on preventing her from identifying him—not from being aware of his presence.

  Her interest in his presence, though, was beginning to wane, and to change form. She now was annoyed. She wanted to be rid of him. The traffic behind her was dense enough that if she could get across Georgia Avenue ahead of him, there was no way he could follow or catch up.

  The third time was not the charm.

  “Damn, damn, damn!” She smacked the steering wheel and cussed, relatively inaudibly and completely unintelligibly, as she’d learned to do from her partner, the Master Cusser of the Universe. While she didn’t mind running a red light—or two or three—she did mind receiving a moving violation summons. So intent had she been on determining whether the white Range Rover would attempt to follow her through the light that she hadn’t understood for several blocks the intent of the blue flashing lights behind her. “Hellfire and damnation!”

  The young cop stood outside her car door and leaned slightly into the window, his hands on his hips and his face a road map of displeasure: forehead raised and wrinkled, eyebrows bunched together, lips curved down. “That’s how people get killed. You probably didn’t see those two vehicles that missed nailing you by inches, did you?”

  She shook her head but more in dismay than in response to his question, though his question is what she answered. “No, Officer, I didn’t see them.” She shook her head again and blew out her frustration through pursed lips in a burst of air. “What do running red light tickets cost these days?” she asked as she leaned over to retrieve her registration and insurance card from the glove box and her license from her purse.

  “Depends, Miss Gibson,” the young cop replied so dryly that she wondered if he really was as young as he appeared, especially as he proceeded to ignore her with the nonchalance of a cop with Jake Graham’s years of experience as he studied the documentation in his hand.

  “Why didn’t you tell him you were being followed?”

  “I don’t know for certain that I was being followed.”

  “You just told me you were being followed!”

  “Telling you is one thing. Telling the cop who stopped me for running a red light is another thing. And why are you busting my chops about this, Jake?”

  “Because, dammit, C.A., I’m pissed that you weren’t driving a company vehicle. You could have been in direct and immediate and constant contact with Central Operations the entire time.”

  “And that would have served what purpose, Jake? GGI vehicles don’t have rear-mounted cameras that would have recorded this guy’s presence. A GGI vehicle wouldn’t have run undetected through that red light. So being in constant contact with Central would have helped me how, exactly?” She realized that she was sounding slightly whiny, when all she wanted was not to sound as irritated as she felt. Surely there was some middle ground between whiny and irritated.

  “You’re a partner in this corporation. There is a vehicle assigned to you . . .” He’d stood to deliver this pronouncement and had begun walking back and forth when suddenly he stopped. “By the way, the company will pay the ticket, you know.”

  She abandoned all her efforts to manage her frustration and irritation with him and laughed out loud, a joyful noise that tapered off into a giggle as he feigned his own brand of irritation. Jake Graham was unique among men and she’d rather have him as her friend and partner than as her nemesis any day. She also let pass the opportunity to chide him about being such a stickler for rules and protocol, strangely aware that along with the levity of the moment, there remained a sense of unease. Besides, she knew what his response would be: “I’m a cop. I do rules.” And it was the cop in him that picked up on the uneasy feeling in her.

  “You think this guy was with you when you left the—what is it you call the martial arts studio, in Bethesda?” he asked. “Or before that . . . he followed you there?” He thought for a moment. “Or is this just some horny bastard following a beautiful woman?”

  Not only picked up on but zeroed in on. For that was exactly the source of her uneasiness: Had the man in the white Range Rover been waiting for her outside her karate class, and if so, how had he known she’d be there this morning? Or had he followed her to Bethesda from her home in the Foggy Bottom section of downtown D.C.?

  She shrugged. “I didn’t know until I got up this morning that I felt like working out, and I didn’t decide to go until after my second cup of coffee. And it’s called a dojo.” She shrugged again and unconsciously rubbed the place beneath her left shoulder blade and above her left breast where, six months ago, a bullet had ripped through most of the connective tissue and lodged dangerously near the artery to her heart. She still didn’t enjoy full range of motion in her left arm. The diligent practice of the martial arts that she loved would, in time, restore the health and strength of that limb. She hoped that it also would dim the painful memory that she had killed a man. With her bare hands. Because she was a martial arts expert.

  “I can’t picture anybody associated with that undercover insurance thing being smart enough to figure out that you’re not really going to let them reconstruct your knee,” Jake said musingly, scratching his head.

  She stared blankly at him.

  “Jesus, C.A. Get a grip, would you?”
he snapped, and his words carried a real hint of a sting. “What we do around here isn’t so insignificant that you shouldn’t be able to remember your part in it from week to week.”

  “Ouch,” she said with a rueful grin. “Retract claws, please, and make no further attack upon partner.”

  He narrowed his eyes and peered at her through the squinty slits. “This thing has unnerved you, hasn’t it? Why?”

  “Yes,” she replied. “And I don’t know why. But I do know that Mr. White Range Rover was no horny bastard who just happened to choose me to follow on Monday morning after a bad weekend.” It was her turn to pace. She stood up and realized that she hadn’t finished dressing after her hurried shower—her legs and feet were bare and, she realized, she hadn’t yet applied any makeup or combed her hair. And Jake had asked if she was unnerved? She sat back down and, suddenly aware that her legs were chilly without stockings, drew them up into the seat beneath her. “And no, I don’t think that an outraged orthopedic surgeon is stalking me, even though we did cost them a few hundred thousand dollars.”

  She ran her memory over the physical therapists and nurses and surgeons that she’d encountered during the month she pretended to be a patient with hip joint pain, while Surgical Associates, Inc. billed her for thousands of dollars’ worth of superfluous diagnostic and therapeutic services before finally recommending a surgical procedure she didn’t need. While she ostensibly was seeking a second opinion, they’d sent Jake’s wife in with a vague pain in her lower back, with the same results. Their insurance company client was so enthused with their preliminary report that GGI now was on permanent retainer.

  Carole Ann slowly shook her head, lips slightly downturned in distaste. “No. None of that bunch would be wary or suspicious of me because first they’d have to believe they were doing something wrong. I don’t know that I’ve ever encountered a more self-righteous, smug collection of unlikable characters.” The look of distaste on her face intensified. “I’d really like not to have to subject my body to them again.”

  “Well, another couple of weeks and we’re done with them. At least until the next crooked doc surfaces.”

  “As long as I don’t have be the patient next time. I don’t like it, as you know, and I’m also not totally comfortable leaving ourselves open to charges of entrapment. I was there under an assumed name, after all.”

  “You were there undercover, C.A. Big difference between undercover work and entrapment. You didn’t ask anybody in that office to do or say anything they wouldn’t ordinarily do or say. That’s the standard for entrapment. And besides, we’ve got the records and testimony of other patients, including Grace. You’re just the expert icing on the cake.”

  Carole Ann nodded. “And I’m glad it worked as well as it did, just as long as you keep in mind I don’t want to make it a habit. I don’t do this cop stuff so well.”

  He laughed at her. “You do ‘this cop stuff’ like a pro and you may as well give up whining and complaining about it. But . . .” and he raised his hand to halt her protest before it could erupt, “no more of it for a while,” and he slapped the palms of his hands together in an up and down motion, dismissing all thoughts of greedy doctors and vindictive insurance companies. Then he shifted focus and fixed her in his sights, almost exactly as if he were lining up a shot at target practice. “What do you want to do about this business this morning?”

  “Nothing we can do, Jake.”

  “I knew you’d say something like that, so I’m going to tell you what we’re going to do. I’m going to follow you home tonight and you’re going to park your Saab in your garage, where it belongs. And you’re going to park your butt at home tonight, where you belong. And in the morning, I’m going to pick you up and drive you to work and you’re going to familiarize yourself with the operation of the specially equipped Explorer that belongs to you.”

  “None of which will prevent the guy in the white Range Rover from following me again if he wants to.”

  “That’s right,” Jake said with a tight grin. “It won’t. But because your Explorer does have a tracking device—not a rear-mounted camera—it will let me know where you are at all times so I can send somebody to grab him if he does follow you, and I’ll have his ass spread-eagle on the pavement, begging for the chance to explain.”

  Carole Ann had no response to that, even though Jake sat quietly for several long moments, waiting. Finally he began rubbing the palms of his hands back and forth as if warming them.

  “So. You ready to do Monday-morning stuff?”

  Jacob Graham, a former homicide detective in the Washington, D.C., police department, had been running his own investigative and security consulting business for a little more than two years. For the last year and a half, that business had been called Gibson, Graham International, and Carole Ann Gibson, Esq., had been his full partner. A former criminal defense attorney and partner in one of D.C.’s largest and most prestigious law firms, C.A. was, Jake would tell anybody willing to listen, “the best damn trial lawyer in this town.”

  She slid an eight-inch stack of deep purple file folders—aubergine, Jake’s wife called the color—from the right side of the desk to a position in front of her, and opened the top one. She was as adept as Jake at shifting gears and changing direction. It was, after all, Monday morning and time to review and assess the status of their work.

  “I’m recommending that we take a pass on this embassy thing. Too much potential for aggravation with not enough potential for a payoff. Essentially what they want is security guards, and as far as I’m concerned, given their relative proximity to the Israelis, the British, and the Egyptians, security’s not that significant a problem for them.”

  Jake frowned. “Then that’s something they already ought to have known. Why bother to call us?”

  Carole Ann shuffled the pages of the file and plucked one from the middle. “They called us right after that bomb scare at the Canadian consulate. First they wanted a security evaluation, then—”

  “Yeah, yeah, yeah,” Jake interrupted with an impatient flick of his wrist. “I remember now. Sent Marshall over there three times and every time he met with somebody different, last time because the guy from the time before had been sent home after his third arrest for drunk driving. You’re right. We don’t need it. Next one.”

  Carole Ann opened a second file folder, read for a few seconds, and closed it. “This one’s a keeper. AU law school security survey, installation, and maintenance. The contract will all but write itself—it will be almost identical to the Howard University one. And we may owe Warren a finder’s fee.” Jake snorted and she laughed. Warren Forchette was a New Orleans lawyer and friend to them both. “Come on, Jake. Fair’s fair. We got American University because of the work we did at Howard U’s law school and the Howard job was a direct referral from Warren.”

  Jake snorted again, then growled, with absolutely no hint of real malice, “Forchette makes enough money on his own without me passing bucks his way. I’m just a poor homicide detective, not a rich lawyer.”

  Carole Ann’s hoot of derisive, disbelieving laughter broke through her partner’s feigned haughtiness, and his face relaxed into a real smile as he sank back into the sofa and crossed his legs, right knee over left. His black Kenneth Cole loafers, black silk socks, and black wool slacks would have put the lie to his “just a poor homicide detective” claim if his totally relaxed demeanor hadn’t. He locked his hands behind his head, elbows sticking out like wings. “When do they want us to get started?”

  “January first,” she replied, closing the folder and setting it aside.

  “Good,” he said with a satisfied nod of his head. “Keep the bean counters happy. Next one.”

  She opened a new file and a frown wrinkled her features. “Surveillance. A chain of appliance discounters wants us to establish electronic monitoring of all their warehouses and loading docks. You know how I feel about surveillance, Jake,” she said.

  “Yeah, C.A., I know
how you feel about surveillance. Same way you feel about insurance companies. And I love ’em both for the same reason: big, fat, easy money with little potential for physical danger or lawsuits. Am I right?”

  She closed the folder, placed it on top of the New Case Files pile, and shook her head.

  “Is there any problem with that case, C.A.? Are there any legal or contractual blips on the screen?”

  “Moral blips, Jake. Surveillance is spying.”

  “It is not!” he snapped. “Any more than working undercover is entrapment. We’re watching employees on the loading dock of an appliance company where every week, a couple of washing machines or dryers or big-screen TVs or computers or CD players go missing. Somebody is stealing that stuff, C.A. Somebody who works for that company. The owner knows it, and I know it, and you know it. And the only way to find out who’s doing the stealing is to watch them. And then catch them.”

  “And, during the course of our watching, perhaps see employees using drugs, having sex, gambling, sleeping on the job?”

  “That’s why you write the kinds of contracts you do, C.A., to guarantee that we’re not violating anybody’s rights, civil or privacy or otherwise.” He smiled a smile at her that was mostly a grimace. “Can we please continue our review of pending cases and contracts so I can get back to work?”

  She grimaced back at him before taking up a new file. “This missing person thing I like a lot. There still are some questions that need answering before we finalize the agreement, but I’d sure like to pursue it. It’s fascinating.”

  “That’s the Islington girl, right? Yeah, that is real interesting,” he agreed, and rubbed the backs of his fingers up and down the side of his face, as if checking to see whether he needed to shave. “It could also be a big waste of time, C.A. In the first place, she’s not a minor and he can’t make her come back home if she doesn’t want to. And in the second place, that girl’s been missing for what, five or six months now? If her daddy wanted her back, why didn’t he hire somebody to look for her back then? God knows he can afford it.”