Page 8 of Wired (Buchanan-Renard 13)
âMillion,â she supplied.
She explained everything, from the nursing home segment on the news to the e-mail sheâd sent. Alec said he hadnât heard of the hacking. Liam didnât respond. He seemed to be studying her as he listened to her recount the details.
âDid they get the hackers?â Alec asked.
âYes,â she answered. âIt was on the news, but it all happened a long time ago.â
âAbout three years ago,â Liam added.
âThen you knew about it?â
âI read a report on it,â he answered. âA lot of people tried to take credit for getting that money back. None of them could tell the investigators what was said in the e-mail sent to the director, though.â
âDo you remember what it said?â Alec asked Liam.
He nodded. âYeah, I do. It made me laugh.â
âWhat was so funny?â Allison wanted to know.
âProve you did it,â Alec urged. âTell us what the e-mail said.â
She didnât hesitate. ââYouâre welcome.ââ
Alec looked at Liam, who nodded. âThatâs right,â he confirmed.
âAny other chunks of money youâve liberated?â Alec asked.
âYes, and each time I gave specific instructions on how to locate the hackers. And proof so they would go to prison.â
âWhat about the money?â
âI told the FBI where they could find it.â
âIâm curious,â Alec said. âHow much moneyâthe total?â
âAround eighty million.â
They both looked incredulous.
Alec had a good laugh and, shaking his head, said, âYouâre lucky you have immunity.â
Jordan entered the room as Alec was speaking. Hands on her hips, she snapped, âBut you did promise her immunity, and youâre not going to take it back.â When they all turned to look at her, she defended her eavesdropping. âWhat? You didnât think I wouldnât find out what was going on, did you? The house is still empty. Sound echoes,â she protested with indignation.
âDonât get all worked up,â Alec said, exasperated. âI was just saying what could happen if she didnât have immunity.â
âStop trying to scare her. What she did might have been illegal, but not a serious crime. She didnât cause any harm. Nobody goes to jail for looking.â
âDoes she seem scared to you?â Liam asked.
Jordan frowned. âOkay, she doesnât. Allison, donât let them bully you into doing anything you donât want to do.â
âI wonât,â she assured her. âAlec, thereâs another way of looking at this situation. If for whatever reason you were to take away immunity and decide to arrest me, what evidence do you really have? I could explain that I was telling you a story. I could say that I made it all up to show off,â she added with a nod. âYou donât have any proof that Iâve done anything wrong.â
She looked so proud of herself Liam wanted to laugh. âYouâre forgetting you told us you have a file of viruses youâve collected, remember? Thatâs what would nail you.â
âYes, it would,â she agreed. âIf you could find the file.â
âYou think we couldnât?â
âI know you couldnât.â
Liam appreciated her arrogance.
âYouâre awfully confident, Allison,â Alec remarked.
âNone of it matters now, does it? Besides, Iâve decided to quit. No more looking in on protected sites. I promise.â
âExcept youâre going to help us,â Liam reminded her.
Allison didnât respond immediately. âYes, Iâll help you with this problem, but . . . Iâm not going to commit to working for the FBI for an entire year. I have plans. As soon as I find your leak, Iâm gone. And no one else will know Iâve done this. Agreed?â
It wasnât the deal they had hoped for, and Phillips wasnât going to like it, but Allison appeared to be resolute in her position. Liam nodded to Alec and then said, âAgreed.â
Jordan walked into the living room and sat next to Allison on the sofa. âIâm assuming all the secret talk is over.â
âI explained to them that, as soon as I get a chance, Iâll tell you everything,â Allison said.
âWe donât want either one of you to talk about this outside this house. Got that?â Alec warned.
âWhat about Noah? May I tell him?â Jordan asked.
âYouâre going to anyway, arenât you?â Allison wondered.
Jordan nodded. âYes. I just thought it would be nice if I asked.â
âFor Godâs sake, Jordan,â Alec said, âthis is serious.â
âI know,â she replied. âNeither one of us is going to post this conversation on the Internet, and Allison doesnât need to tell me what the assignment is. Iâve already guessed the obvious. You want her to catch a hacker, donât you?â
âSomething like that,â Alec answered.
âDonât leave me out. I want to help.â
âNo, absolutely not,â Allison said. âIf anything went wrong, you could get into trouble.â
âSo could you.â
âI donât matter,â she blurted, unaware how telling the comment was.
âOf course you matter. The FBI has given you immunity. You canât get into trouble.â
âWhat I meant to say is that, if I were to get into trouble, Iâd deserve it. Iâve broken the law. You havenât. Things have a way of getting messed up. It could be dangerous.â
âHow?â
âWhat if the person or people Iâm going after find out who I am and come after me? It could happen,â she insisted.
Jordan turned to Liam. âAre you running this?â
He nodded slowly. He kept his gaze on Allison and said, âIâm not going to let anything happen to you. Youâll be safe.â
âI still want to help,â Jordan insisted.
âIâve got a better chance of searching without being detected. Thatâs all Iâm saying,â Allison said.
The two of them began to argue in a language Liam had never heard before. It was computer talk on an incomprehensible level.
âWhat would you do, Jordan, if . . .â was as much as Liam or Alec understood.
As Liam listened to the two women debate the best ways of entering a secure site, he couldnât stop staring at Allison. She was beautiful, yes, but what held his attention was the way her mind worked.
Alec interjected a thought into the discussion. âYou know, Allison, there are some people who have sold various bugs and viruses for a lot of money.â
âIâd never sell them,â she protested.
Allisonâs phone rang again. She muted it and didnât even bother to see who was calling.
âIâm curious. How many viruses have you collected?â Alec asked.
âOh, you know.â
âNo, I donât know. Thatâs why I asked,â Alec said.
She started to blush. âIâd like to know, too,â Liam said.
âA few?â Alec asked.
It was obvious she was embarrassed. âMore than a few.â
âHow many more than a few?â Liam asked.
âSeveral?â Alec asked. âOr a bunch?â
Jordan nudged Allison and said, âYouâve already admitted that you have a file of viruses. You might as well tell them how many. They canât do anything to you.â
Eventually they would find out, Allison thought. If she just told them now, sheâd save time. âNot including the ones Iâve destroyed, Iâd say thereâre a hundred seventy or so in the file, give or take twenty or thirty.â
âSo . . . two hundred,â Liam guessed.
She nodded. âOr thereabouts. Maybe a few more.â
Alec looked astounded. âHow long have you been at this?â
âNot all that long.â
&nb
sp; She picked up the carton and the can and carried them to the kitchen to get away from their scrutiny for a little while. She didnât like being the center of attention, especially since she was now considered a criminal in their minds. Alec was a nice man, she thought, but he looked at her as if she were a freak. Liam didnât, though. He seemed skeptical, which wasnât as bad, she supposed, yet there was something about the way his eyes focused so intently on hers that unnerved her.
Standing at the window with her arms folded, she stared out into the night and thought about the conversation. Maybe she shouldnât have been so honest. It was too late now, but she felt sick with regret. She never should have started looking in on private sites. It didnât matter if her motives were good or bad. She had broken the law countless times. Never again, she vowed.
In the living room Alec turned to Liam. âIf only half of what she says she can doââ
Jordan interrupted. âItâs all true. Allison doesnât lie.â
âSheâs that good?â Alec asked.
Jordan nodded. âYes.â
Alec shook his head and let out a long, low whistle. âSheâs a weapon. In the wrong hands she could be lethal.â
EIGHT
Alone in Jordanâs kitchen, Allison listened to the message her aunt had left on her phone. She had hoped it would be about something new, but it was the same old story. Will was in trouble.
For the first few years of his life, William Alexander Trent had been the apple of his daddyâs eye. Willie, as he was affectionately called by his parents then, was the perfect son they had waited eight long years for. He grew up to be somewhat tall and lean like his father, had the same square jaw and handsome features, and could upon occasion be charming. But werenât most drunks charming at one time or another? Will, the name he insisted on once he reached puberty, didnât just inherit his fatherâs good looks and his seemingly insatiable thirst for alcohol; he also inherited his belligerent personality. In high school he played football and helped lead his team to the state championship. Because of his success on the field, he became a big man at school. All the guys looked up to him, and all the girls flocked around him. His senior year was the high point in his life. From then on it was downhill.
Will expected to be flooded with college scholarship offers but learned that, although he was an above-average quarterback, he wasnât exceptional, and since he cared more about his social standing than about his grades, he was a below-average student. When the recruiters didnât come knocking, he adjusted his expectations and ended up barely getting into a state school. He squeaked by his first two years but flunked out the second semester of his third year. It wasnât a question of not being smart enough to succeed; Will just didnât want to study. From the time he was a little boy, all heâd had to do was throw a tantrum and his parents would fetch whatever he wanted. He never had to work for anything. No effort was ever involved, and even more important, there were never any consequences.
While his former high school friends were graduating from college and moving on to bigger and better lives, Will was failing at one job after another. Nothing held his interest long. He gravitated toward people who were like him, and when those relationships went sourâas they inevitably didâhe just found a different group of underachievers to hang around. He drank and he fought, and when he wanted something, no matter how expensive, he took it, leaving his parents and the attorney to clean up the mess.
His first arrest had happened shortly after high school. He was caught shoplifting a pair of running shoes from a sporting goods store. After that, there were three more arrests. Each time, his attorney was able to whittle the charges down and keep him out of jail, and each time Will was arrested, the attorneyâs fees tripled.
Will didnât do anything to help his cause. His temper continued to get the better of him.
In his last appearance in court, heâd mouthed off to the judge, a stupid mistake that had led to a round of anger management classes that didnât take. Now, because of a bar fight that sent two men to the hospital with serious injuries, Will was facing felony charges that would put him away for five to ten years.
Allison was conflicted by the emotions she felt whenever Willâs name was mentioned. Her initial reaction was usually a mix of anger and resentment, yet deep down there was a hint of sympathy for him. He was the product of his upbringing, after all. His dependency had been ingrained in him since he was a child. But now he was an adult, and it was time for him to take some responsibility. She couldnât understand why he continued to act out and why he refused to learn from his mistakes. To her, his behavior was completely irrational. Although they had grown up in the same house, she realized she actually didnât know him very well. They had nothing in common, and he never really paid much attention to her. His fights were always with his father and mother, but no matter how out of control he became, he never took his anger out on her.
Allison could hear the men talking in low voices in Jordanâs living room but tuned them out and played her message again. Leaning against the kitchen counter, she put the phone to her ear and listened to her auntâs demands a second time.
âWe have a situation here, and you need to come home as soon as possible. Your uncle says the decisionâs been made. Now come home. Will has been . . .â Allison turned the message off without hearing the rest and returned the call. Before she could say a word, her aunt demanded to know where she was.
âI want you home now,â she insisted. Along with the anger and impatience that usually permeated her auntâs voice, there was now a hint of desperation.
âCanât this wait until Monday?â Allison asked. It was Friday, and the last thing she wanted to do was to go to her aunt and uncleâs house in Emerson. By Saturday night Uncle Russell would be a blithering mass of misery. He didnât believe he had a drinking problem because he drank beer during the week and switched to hard liquor only on the weekends. The wrong word would set him off, and heâd go into a rage. He was predictable; sheâd give him that.
âAbsolutely not,â her aunt snapped.
âMaybe we can figure out a solution over the phone.â
No such luck. Her aunt went into a full-blown rant and included the word ungrateful three times. God, Allison hated weekends with her relatives. She interrupted her auntâs tirade, said she would see her tomorrow, and disconnected the call.
Liam stood in the doorway watching her. He could tell from her stance and her expression that something had upset her. She looked so disheartened. He doubted she would tell him what was wrong, but he asked anyway.
âWhat happened?â
âIâm just thinking,â she said.
âYeah? About what?â
âWitness protection.â
He didnât miss a beat. âWant to tell me why?â
She shrugged. âItâs a way to disappear. Thatâs all.â She straightened and brushed past him as she returned to the living room.
For the rest of the evening Allison listened to the details of her assignment and answered about a hundred more questions. Most of them centered on the possible ways she could get into the protected sites without being detected. Even though the sites were constantly being monitored, Allison knew there was always a way around every obstacle. She just had to find the vulnerability. To her it was like a complicated math problem. There was always a solution. Truth be told, she couldnât wait to get started.
It was after midnight when Liam called it quits. The night air had turned cold, and as they walked to his car, Allison folded her arms to ward off the chill. After removing his jacket, Liam placed it on her shoulders and drew her close. He didnât know what perfume she was wearing, but it appealed to him. So did her killer body. Damn shapely for a model. No harm in noticing, he thought, as long as he kept the relationship professional. He wasnât about to make a move. Allison was important to him because she was going to help him solve a prob
lem. Once that was done, he would be on his way to another assignment. Travel had become a way of life for him. Even though he had friends all over the world, there hadnât been time for personal commitments, and he had long ago accepted that as part of his job.
âItâs cold for this time of year,â Allison remarked as Liam drove her back to her house. He had turned the heat on, but she was still shivering. âIâm tired of cold weather . . . but I love Boston.â
âArenât you planning to move as soon as you graduate?â
âYes,â she answered. âIâm thinking Santa Clara, California. Itâs beautiful there.â Several minutes later she said, âYouâre the lucky one.â
âHowâs that?â
âYou get to travel all over the world.â
âYes, I do, but it can get old.â
âMaybe you just need someone to go with you.â
They stopped at a red light. Liam turned to her. âAre you applying for the job?â
She had foolishly believed she was beginning to relax with him until he looked into her eyes and smiled. He made her forget her every thought. She tried to be practical and analyze her reaction to him. Maybe it was just that he seemed so much bigger than life. She had done photo shoots with a lot of male models, men with perfect profiles and nearly perfect bodies, but none of them was as ruggedly handsome as Liam. There was a raw sexuality to him. She looked down, and her hands were fisted in her lap. She really had to put a stop to that, she told herself.
She knew heâd noticed. She didnât think he missed much of anything. But then, he was an FBI agent. He should notice the little things.
âHow do you want to do this?â Liam asked.
âDo what?â
âWhat weâve been talking about all evening. Getting into the FBI system without being detected.â He smiled as though he could tell her mind was going in an entirely different direction.
âOh,â she said, pulling herself together. âIâve often thought about how Iâd do it.â
âYouâve thought about breaking into the FBI?â
âNo, Iâve thought about how Iâd do it. Thatâs all. The key is finding a weakness.â