Page 13 of Fire and Ice (Buchanan-Renard 7)
AGENT MACALISTER WAS AS CHARMING AS EVER. AND SO was his greeting. He didnât waste time on âHelloâ or âHi there.â She opened the door and heard, âItâs a felony to break into a crime lab and steal evidence.â
âBut I didnât break into the lab, did I? I merely threatened to,â she replied. âI suppose it would be impolite to ask you to give me my recorder and then go away, Agent MacAlister.â
âJack. Call me Jack.â He smiled as he walked past her into the living room. âYouâre not getting your recorder back until you say my name.â
He didnât look like he was going to be leaving anytime soon. He was making himself comfortable on her sofa.
âWhy are you here?â she asked.
âItâs a long story.â
âTry me.â She folded her arms across her chest and suddenly remembered she wasnât wearing a bra under her T-shirt. The band rubbed against her incision. She grabbed her oversized cardigan. She had placed it on the back of a chair and planned to put it on before she opened the door to Mr. Bitterman, but sheâd forgotten all about it.
Jack dropped her recorder on the table next to him, pushed the ottoman farther from the sofa to accommodate his long legs, then sat back and put his feet up. Sophie wouldnât have been surprised if heâd picked up her TV remote control and asked for a beer.
âIâm doing one last favor for Alec before I head to the ocean.â
âHow long is your vacation?â
âItâs not a vacation. Itâs a leave of absence.â His answer was abrupt, impatient.
âIs that good or bad?â
âDepends.â
âWhat beach do you have in mind?â
âDonât know what beach yet. Someplace warm, though.â
âWhat was the favor Alec wanted? He could have sent a messenger with the recorder.â
âI have to listen to the interview.â
He put his hand up when he saw she was going to object and said, âDetective Steinbeck told Alec heâd already listened to it, but when pressed, admitted he had trouble paying attention. Said that the guy you were interviewing ⦠whatâs his name?â
âHarrington. William Harrington.â
âOkay, so Steinbeck said it was a real dry interview â¦â
Her back stiffened. âI beg to differ. I donât do dry interviews.â
Jack continued as though she hadnât interrupted. âSteinbeck said Harrington droned on and on in a monotone voice.â
Sophie nodded. True. Harrington had droned on and on.
âThe police are investigating anyone you may have come in contact with in the days before the shooting and Alec thought one of us should listen to it just in case there was some connection.â
âHe just talks about 5K races heâs won.â
âHow many 5K races?â
She smiled. âTwenty-four. Are you sure you want to listen?â
âIâm here, arenât I?â
âI could tell you about it.â
He shook his head. She tapped her foot impatiently while deciding what to do. Then she gave in. âFine. You may listen to the interview.â
âSophie, I wasnât asking for permission. Iâm gonna listen to it. I can do it here, or Iâll take the recorder and listen to it at my place.â
âOkay, listen to it here.â
âYou want to start now?â
âNot yet. Weâll wait until Mr. Bitterman gets here. He probably wonât want to listen to the interview, but I should give him the choice. And please, donât interfere when Iâm talking to him about an article I want to write. Youâll want to interfere, but try and restrain yourself.â
âWhy would I want to interfere?â
She sighed. âThe polar bear.â
âPolar bear? You want to write about a polar bear?â
âNot exactly about the bear. His name is Barry, by the way.â
He flashed a smile. âSounds like youâre writing a kidâs book.â
âOnly if my intention was to scar them for life,â she said.
âSay my name, Sophie, or I worry I might just have to interfere.â
âI donât want to call you by your first name because I donât want to get that friendly.â
He laughed. âYes, you do. Itâs okay. I want to get friendly, too.â
She shook her head. âNo, you donât. You donât like me.â
âI donât have to like you to get friendly with you.â
She had no idea what to say now, and so, feeling a bit like a coward, she retreated to the kitchen.
âGrab me a root beer,â he called out.
âAbsolutely not,â she called back. âThe root beerâs for Mr. Bitterman.â
He decided to join her in the galley kitchen.
âWord on the street is that youâve got a whole closet full of Kellyâs.â
The pipeline from Cordie to Jack needed to be plugged.
âYou may have a Coke, a Pepsi, diet sodas, or water.â
He had to check out the refrigerator himself before making a decision. He finally settled on a can of Diet Coke, then went to the cabinets to find something to snack on.
She tried to push rice cakes on him. Regan had gotten them for her at the grocery store, but Sophie didnât like them. What she did like was kettle chips, and so, of course, that was the snack Jack wanted.
âJust because Alec can go through my cabinets doesnât mean you can.â
Heâd already opened the bag and was chewing on a chip. âYou arenât being a very gracious hostess. What are we having for dinner?â
Her response wasnât clever. She sputtered.
âUse your words, Sophie. Use your words,â he drawled as he strolled back to the sofa.
She wanted to use a meat cleaver. Good thing she didnât own one. While she enjoyed a few other murderous thoughts, she got a cold soda out of the refrigerator, took a couple of deep breaths, and then went to join him.
âIâve been injured. Iâm not cooking dinner tonight.â
âFrom the looks of your kitchen, Iâm guessing you donât cook at all.â
âOf course I cook.â
âYeah? The price tags and stickers are still on your pots and pans, or rather, your pot and pan. Didnât see any lids.â
She sat down next to him, reached across his lap, and grabbed a handful of chips. âI microwave.â
He abruptly changed the subject. âWhenâs your boss getting here?â
She checked the time on his watch and said, âHe should be here now.â
âHow long is the recording?â
âA couple of hours, maybe a little more. Why?â
âI want to be in bed by ten.â
âTen, huh? You donât look ninety. Must be all that sleep youâre getting?â
Mr. Bitterman didnât show up until almost an hour later. It was odd, but sitting with Jack while they waited wasnât at all uncomfortable. He wasnât hesitant to answer questions about his background, where he grew up, where he went to college, and how, after graduating from law school, he had decided to become an FBI agent instead of joining a law firm.
âTell me why youâre taking a leave of absence. Burn out?â she asked.
âNo.â
âShoot someone you shouldnât have?â
âNo.â
âMental problems? Thatâs a yes, isnât it?â
He smiled. âNo.â
âThen what?â She nudged him in his side. She was as tenacious as he was.
âItâs a forced leave of absence.â
âNow thatâs interesting.â
She waited for him to explain, and when he kept silent, she pressed again. âYou know Iâm going to ask. What did you do?â
He reluctantly told her about the YouTube video. Once heâd finished explaining, he added, âYouâre probably the only person in Chicago who hasnât watched the damned thing.â
âThe video. Thatâs right. Regan and Cordie told me to watch it, but I forgot.â
âUntil somethin
g more interesting gets filmed, Iâm being hounded by the press. At first the higher-ups wanted me to lay low in Chicago, but this isnât going away. Now they want me out of town, so Iâm heading to an ocean until this blows over.â He shook his head as he added, âI guess I know what it must be like for you every time your fatherâs in the news.â
Sophie didnât want the conversation to get anywhere near her father, and so she steered him away with a couple of other personal questions. The only topic he was reluctant to discuss was his love life. He admitted heâd never been married, but when she asked him if heâd ever come close, he changed the subject.
âNow itâs my turn,â he said. âLetâs talk about your father.â
âLetâs not.â
He didnât push. âIâd ask about your background, but I donât need to. I know all about you.â He then proceeded to prove it.
When she thought he had finished, she said, âYou read my file.â
âI know a whole lot more that isnât in your file.â
âLike what?â she asked suspiciously.
âLike you work hard to make people think youâre superficial.â
âI am superficial.â She protested even as she realized how ridiculous she sounded.
He laughed. âItâs your protection, isnât it? The only people who know the real you are Regan and Cordie, and maybe Reganâs brothers.â
âI donât hide who I am.â
âYes, you do.â His voice softened as he added, âIâve done a little checking, and Iâve got you all figured out, Sophie Rose.â
She shook her head.
He nodded. âYouâre always saving for a new purse, arenât you?â
âI like purses.â Jeez, she sounded defensive.
âYou donât actually buy the purses, though, do you? You pick out the one you want, save enough to buy itâand Iâve heard some of them are way up there in priceâand then you give the money to a two-hundred-forty-pound muscle man named Muffin, who runs a soup kitchen. Itâs become a game you and Muffin play. You send a photo of the purse in an envelope along with the cash.â
âYou donât know what youâre talking about. Iâm going to buy a Birkin.â
âThatâs several thousand, isnât it?â
âI am going to buy the Birkin,â she insisted. âWould I go to visit it every Wednesday at five p.m. if I werenât? Itâs a gorgeous buttery tan with gold markings.â
He looked exasperated. âNo, youâre not going to buy it. What youâre going to do is save the money and then give the money away. You do a lot of nice things you donât want anyone to know about, donât you?â
She started to protest again, but he stopped her. âGive it up, Sophie. Youâre not an artificial, money-hungry, label-loving dimwit. Sorry, sweetheart. It just doesnât fly with me.â
Sophie was squirming in the hot seat, but Mr. Bitterman saved the day when he knocked on the door. She had never felt such relief. She hated that Jack knew so much about her. Why had he gone to the trouble to find out her secrets? Why was he interested? What was he up to? Her father. That was it. He wouldnât be looking into her history and her behavior if he werenât hunting for something about her father.
Bitterman handed her his coat. Tugging off his tie on his way into the living room, he sat down hard in an easy chair. While he and Jack discussed the attempted murder investigationâher attempted murder investigationâshe hung his coat in the closet and went into the kitchen to get him a cold root beer.
Bitterman was rolling up his sleeves as he asked Jack, âSo no progress on the case at all? No leads?â
âThatâs what Detective Steinbeck is telling me,â Jack said.
Bitterman pointed a finger at Sophie. He took the root beer she offered but held on to his frown. âThen youâre sitting tight, young lady. I donât want you running in the streets while thereâs some trigger-happy nutcase on the loose.â
âSir, I donât run in the streets, and as far as sitting tight ⦠I asked you to come over to talk about something important.â Without thinking, Sophie crossed to the sofa and sat down next to Jack. Bitterman noticed.
âBefore this conversation turns to business matters, I have to ask you how you were able to get so much root beer,â her boss asked. âI thought Iâd nabbed the last case in Chicago.â
She glanced at Jack. He was trying not to laugh. âYeah, Sophie, howâd you do it?â
Her thoughts flashed back to the meat cleaver.
âActually, sir, I was desperate to get you to come over so I could talk to you, and I might have exaggerated the exact amount of root beer on hand.â
Bitterman leaned forward. âYou might have exaggerated?â he asked warily.
She looked him in the eyes. âI did exaggerate. I donât have a closet full of root beer. Just a couple of bottles. Thatâs all.â
âIn other words, she lied,â Jack was happy to interject.
Sophie gave him a look that should have withered him but didnât. She didnât want Mr. Bitterman to dwell on his disappointment so she quickly tried to turn his attention to a more important matter.
âSir, do you remember William Harrington and the 5K race?â
âSure, I remember. He changed his mind at the last minute and didnât run the race, right? You told me it was because he knew he couldnât win.â
âThatâs what I thought, but it turned out I was wrong. That wasnât the reason he didnât run.â
Bitterman looked around the room. âSeriously, there isnât more root beer?â
âSir, what Iâm trying to tell you is important.â
He nodded. âAll right. So what was the guyâs reason for not running?â
âHe died.â
Bitterman took a few seconds to absorb the information, then said, âWhat a shame. He was a young man, wasnât he? He had to be young to run all those races. I suppose dying is just about the best reason there is not to run a race. Whereâd it happen?â
âIn Alaska,â she answered. âHe died in Alaska.â
From her tone, Bitterman knew something more was coming. He set his root beer on the coffee table and sat back. âHe did, did he?â
âA polar bear ate him.â
âWhatâs this?â he asked, confused. âWhat did you say?â
She repeated the terrible news, and Jack chimed in at the end. âBarry ate him.â
âMy God, they named the polar bear that ate a man? Thatâs awful callous.â
âNo, sir. He already had a name.â
Now to the tricky part. Sophie had to convince Mr. Bitterman to let her investigate the story, and if necessary, send her to Alaska without making him think she might be in danger. Her boss was overly cautious about her. She hadnât quite rehearsed what she was going to say, but she thought she did a great job of piquing his interest and not hinting at anything other than a human interest story idea.
Then Jack started asking hard questions about living conditions, the wild animals, and the harsh climateâall questions she didnât want to answer in front of her boss. Sophie poked him in his side with her elbow. âWe can talk about this later, Jack. Remember, you werenât going to interfere.â
âThe danger ofââ
She interrupted. âI know, itâs terribly cold up there, but Iâll wear the appropriate clothing.â
âThatâs not whatââ
She poked him again. âInstead of this story, I could write about your leave of absence and remind Chicago of the video.â
Jack leaned in close. âIf you want to go to Alaska and freeze to death, I wonât stop you.â
âYou say the sweetest things.â
It turned out that Bitterman liked the idea of Sophie getting out of Chicago for a while. He also thought his subscribers would enjoy reading some human interest stories about the rugged people who lived in Alaska. If she made the trip, he might as well get his moneyâs worth.
âI read somewhere that the high school in Barrow has started a football team. It was a cleve
r way to keep the kids in school and off drugs and alcohol. Itâs working, too. You might want to go there. Youâve sold me, Sophie. You can do the story. Iâll fund the trip.â
He started to stand, then changed his mind. âJust wondering ⦠how did you find out about Harrington?â
âHe had my business card with him. The police up there found it and called me to tell me he had died.â
Before he asked another question, she rushed on, âJack and I are going to listen to the interview I did with Harrington. Iâm hoping he said something I missed that would explain why he went there. Itâs a bit of a puzzle Iâd like to solve. Would you like to listen to the interview with us?â
Bitterman declined. âItâs been a long day. I want to get home and relax.â
The second the door closed behind him, Jack started toward her. She backed up.
âA bit of a puzzle?â he asked. âCare to explain what youâre really doing?â
She shrugged. âIâm giving William Harrington the last word.â
JOURNAL ENTRY 316
ARCTIC CAMP
Eric and I have become brothers of a sort. Since weâre both still in our twenties, the bond comes naturally. We keep no secrets from each other. I confessed to him that I was doing research on my own, that I had thought to study the effects of the bitter cold and the isolation on Brandon, Kirk, and Eric, too. I admitted I wanted to increase the stress with various experiments but had decided to forget that plan and concentrate on Erics amazing discovery.
I wanted to be bolder. I urged Eric to inject more of the new pack. I have certainly changed, for now I believe that scientific discoveries that can benefit others justifies whatever means necessary.
THE MORE JACK HEARD ABOUT SOPHIEâS PLANS, THE CAR sire he thought she was, and he made the mistake of saying so.
Her response was sharp. âYou donât have the authority to stop me from going there or anywhere else, for that matter. I have to do this.â
âWhy?â
âBecause no one else will.â She brushed past him as she added, âI donât think William Harringtonâs death was an accident. He was excited about being asked to join some secret group or project because he was so physically fit.â