Page 24 of Carter

The sun was just dipping down below the horizon by the time Carter pulled the truck to a stop in what looked like a working-class neighborhood on the outskirts of Sacramento. Long shadows stretched across the street up to the house that they’d parked in front of.

  Ally’s gaze darted up and down the street. She knew Carter would never bring her anywhere that he thought was dangerous, but she still couldn’t shake the feeling that one of Fuller’s men was out there waiting for her. She saw menace in every rustling bush and passing car.

  She’d never been so on edge. There was no way that she could live the rest of her life this way, jumping at shadows. This had to end. It just had to. She wasn’t an overly fearful person, and she didn’t relish the idea of becoming one.

  “Are you sure it’s safe here?” Ally asked as Carter reached for the handle of his door.

  “It’s the safest place I know.” He gave her a long look. “Only my core team knows the location of this safe house. Not even Charlie knows. There’s no paper trail linking the house to Macmillan Security, no way for Fuller or Addams to track us here.”

  Ally’s brows pulled together. “So, why didn’t we come here earlier?”

  “Because it’s reserved for only the most dire of emergencies.”

  “And what we’ve been dealing with hasn’t been an emergency?” she asked.

  “Not until there’s at least a couple of bodies left behind.”

  “Makes sense,” Ally said, nodding slowly. At least he wasn’t sugar coating the situation.

  She drew in a deep breath. It was now or never.

  Before she could chicken out, she jumped out of the truck and hustled up the path. Ally could hear Carter following a step behind. She didn’t see a doorbell when she made it up to the front of the house, so she gave a small knock against the wooden door.

  A few seconds later, the door swung open. Ally started at the sudden move. Her nerves weren’t calmed any to find Rhys’ cold face staring back at her. He stared at her for a long moment before he looked at Carter.

  “Uh…hi,” Ally tried.

  Rhys didn’t say a word, just held the door and took a step to the side, allowing them to enter.

  Suddenly, Ally wasn’t sure if she was safer inside or out.

  Carter must have sensed her hesitation, because he gave her a little nudge from behind, making up her mind for her.

  “Is everyone here?” he asked as he followed her.

  Rhys nodded and shut the door. After he threw the lock, he led them into the main room, just past the main hallway and started walking into another room.

  The rest of Carter’s team was seated in what Ally figured would have been the living room in any other home. Here, it was just a couch and a single chair. There was a table pushed in the corner with two wooden chairs tucked neatly underneath. And judging by the cleanliness of the bricks in the fireplace, it didn’t receive a lot of visitors.

  So this was a safe house. It was certainly spare, but serviceable. There wasn’t much furniture, hardly anything on the walls, but there weren’t cobwebs in the corners and it wasn’t covered in dust. It was obviously taken care of, but only filled with the barest of necessities.

  Rhys went and sat on the couch next to Jake, who she’d first seen at Fuller’s party. Bowie stood by the fireplace. He crossed his massive arms over his chest as she stepped into the room.

  Mason was sitting in the lone chair. He gave her a half-hearted smile as their eyes met. It was as close to a welcome from this crowd as she was going to get. Every eye was on her, but no one said a word.

  For once, she couldn’t blame them. She had pulled them into this mess. Because of her they were in danger of losing their jobs, their livelihoods, and possibly even their lives.

  If she was in their shoes, Ally doubted she’d say hi to herself either.

  That was fine. She didn’t need a warm reception. She took a single step into the room and then leaned her back up against the wall next to the archway. She might understand where their coldness was coming from, but that didn’t mean that she was going to throw herself into the middle of it.

  Carter, of course, didn’t have any such hesitations. He walked right up to the other side of the mantle and propped his shoulder against it.

  “We don’t have much time so we’ll get started,” he said, immediately taking charge of the room. “Where are we?”

  “Nowhere,” Jake answered from the couch. “The cops shut down the office today. They have the whole place roped off as a crime scene. They said since you took her there it was a material part of the investigation.”

  Carter nodded. “Fuller wanted to scatter the team.”

  “To see where we all went,” Rhys said, stiffening. He didn’t have to say the rest. If that was the case, then they had all just played into Fuller’s plan. And it would have made perfect sense if Carter was his main target.

  But he wasn’t.

  She was.

  These guys were a distraction to him, a minor inconvenience, a part of the plan that refused to play nice. Fuller would deal with them, sure, but he wouldn’t put the full force of his efforts into bringing them down.

  “No,” Ally said.

  Every head swiveled her way and she pulled together every ounce of remaining resolve left inside her. She’d floated some unpopular ideas in tough rooms before. She’d gone toe to toe with cutthroat peers and editors plenty of times, but never to a group that could actually cut her throat.

  “No?” Rhys said, his eyes narrowed and his gaze sharpened…if such a thing were possible.

  Ally straightened her back. “That isn’t what Fuller wants. He doesn’t care about any of you. Sure, you’re a bother, but you’re not a threat.”

  Bowie puffed up at the side of the fireplace, as if she’d injured his pride by insinuating that he wasn’t a mortal threat.

  Ally was about to say that she’d trade places with him in a heartbeat, but that wasn’t exactly true. There might be no love lost between any of them, but she didn’t wish harm on any of these guys. She didn’t wish it on anyone. The truth was, she’d be wracked with guilt if any one of them got hurt while helping her.

  “Ally’s right,” Mason said. “She’s the one that Fuller’s afraid of. She’s the one with the power to expose him. And that’s the only thing he’s afraid of, political ruin, not physical harm.”

  Carter’s mouth became a flat line as he nodded in agreement. “So the only people he would target would be the ones that he could use as leverage against you.”

  “And let’s be honest,” Ally said, her gaze sweeping across the room. “Other than Carter, you guys don’t really fit that description. I mean, Ol’ Blue Eyes, here, has been borderline friendly to me on a couple of occasions, but the rest of you don’t exactly act like I’ve made your Christmas card list.”

  Rhys’ brows pulled together, but there was no hint of a smile on his face. “Is Ol’ Blue Eyes Mason?”

  Ally cocked her head to the side. “Yeah. Mason. You’re Iceman.”

  “But we both have blue eyes,” he said, his voice deadpan.

  “Yeah, but when I need a sweater when I look into yours…so you’re Iceman.”

  Jake clapped a hand on his friend’s shoulder. “Don’t worry about it. I heard she calls me Bruiser.”

  “She doesn’t have any problem calling me Wall of Meat to my face,” Bowie grumbled.

  “That was said in anger, and I’m sorry…but you have to admit it’s a very apt description,” Ally said.

  “What about the Captain?” Jake asked with more than just idle curiosity showing in his eyes. “What do you call him?”

  “She calls me Carter, and that’s the end of it,” he said, breaking into the conversation. He shot her a look that wasn’t hard to read. Get on with it.

  She put her hands up in mock surrender. He was right. This wasn’t the time.

  “But there’s my point,” she said, steering the conversation back to her original thought. “He’s not going after you
. He’s going after me. So, if he shut down your offices, it had to be for another reason.”

  Carter crossed his arms. He had that faraway look he got when he was lost in thought. “There must be something there he wants.”

  “It could have something to do with the plan,” Mason said.

  Ally’s eyes snapped over to Mason. “What plan?”

  “Oh, sorry,” he said, leaning forward in the chair. “We got so wrapped up with name calling that I almost forgot. There wasn’t much to do after we were kicked out of the office, so I figured someone should probably listen to those bugs we planted in Lucas Addams’ office. Most of it was useless, but then right before four o’clock, things got interesting.”

  Mason leaned forward and pulled up a file on the laptop in front of him. A second later, he pressed play.

  Two voices rang clear as day. One Ally recognized immediately as Lucas Addams’, but the other she couldn’t place. It was familiar, but she struggled to figure out from where.

  “We’re getting awfully close to the critical timeframe for the plan, and the loose ends still haven’t been taken care of. Fuller is starting to get nervous. I don’t need to tell you that’s bad news for all of us,” Lucas said.

  “It shouldn’t be long now. We have access to their offices, and we’ve got a hit on their location,” the second man said.

  “Good. The time for subtlety is over. Make sure the problem is taken care of once and for all. There can’t be any more delays. The plan is going forward regardless. So, either our problem is taken care of or you will be, understood?”

  “Understood, sir. I’ll see to it personally.”

  Ally glanced over at Carter. Their eyes met. The phone call. That was when Lucas Addams had sent the men out to the Garcias’ house.

  Suddenly, she recognized the voice. It was the man that Carter had killed in the barn. No wonder he had fought so hard. Ally knew Lucas Addams well enough to know that he would make good on his threat. If their attacker had walked back into that office without her head, there would have been a bullet waiting for him.

  “There’s also the issue of the compromised information. You’ve had the Macmillan offices in lockdown all day. Have you found anything?” Lucas asked.

  “Not yet, sir. We’ve swept all the computers but found nothing.”

  “Then has it occurred to you that perhaps we’re looking for something other than a computer file? I know Harvey had access to everything to do with the plan. But that Weaver bitch hasn’t printed a damn word yet, so she must be missing something. I don’t need to tell you that we need to find it before she does.”

  Mason stopped the recording.

  “That slipped your mind?” Carter asked him, one brow raised.

  “What can I say, this crew of yours can be very entertaining.”

  “Yeah, it was fucking hilarious when the cops tossed me out of my office today,” Jake said, giving Mason a look that would wither anyone in their right mind. Mason must not have fit that description, because he didn’t even flinch.

  Ally ignored the hyper-masculinized version of office politics going on around her. The wheels spun in her mind. Critical timeframe. The plan. The missing piece.

  Lucas Addams was right. She was missing something. She’d only been able to reconstruct about half of Fuller’s plan from the puzzle pieces Harvey Price had left behind. She knew there was money coming in from shadowy places, and more was expected.

  But how and what did it have to do with all those Department of Defense files? Or the Army Intelligence information? The troop movements? The classified missions? They all swirled together in her mind.

  Carter’s crew bickered around her. Their voices blended together, filling the room with a familiar hum. Her mind buzzed in the chaos. This was the sound that she’d missed. It was like white noise, and her brain came to life.

  She went through the puzzle pieces in her mind, reviewing them one by one.

  She was close. So damned close.

  “I don’t know where you get the guts to laugh,” Rhys barked at Mason. “Seeing how it was your call that gave up Carter’s location and brought Fuller’s men down on them.”

  Ally’s eyes went wide. Her mouth fell open.

  Oh God.

  Of course. Everything fell into place.

  “That’s it,” she shouted, throwing her hands up in the air.

  The room went silent. Every head turned her way.

  She hurried over to Rhys’ side and stared down at him.

  “Say that again,” she said.

  “What?” he asked, looking up at her with confusion in his eyes. “That Mason’s call was the one that gave your location away?”

  Ally clapped her hands. Before she could think better of it, she threw her arms around Rhys and squeezed him hard. She felt the poor man stiffen in her embrace. She didn’t care.

  “Iceman, you’re a genius,” she shouted.

  She pulled away to look into the most puzzled pair of eyes that she’d ever seen.

  “I am?” he asked.

  “Don’t feel too honored. Apparently, she throws that word around as easily as nicknames,” Carter said.

  “No,” Ally said, shaking her head. “This time I mean it.”

  She turned toward Carter, smiling widely.

  His eyes narrowed as he looked at her.

  “You’ve figured it out,” he said. It wasn’t a question.

  “I have,” she said. “Mason, I need your computer.”

  Mason handed it over without hesitation.

  Ally went to the table in the corner and had a seat. It only took her a few seconds to plug in the drive and pull up all the relevant files, so she could click through them one by one.

  Carter put his hand on her shoulder as he looked down at the computer. Mason, Rhys, Jake and Bowie all crowded around her as best they could.

  “So, six months ago Fuller introduced a bill to the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee for a body armor and ballistic defense system,” she started. “The contract, of course, would have gone to Allied Dynamics. But it was shot down for being too expensive.”

  “I’m guessing that probably didn’t go over well with Fuller,” Bowie said.

  “I doubt it,” Ally said, pulling up the quarterly projections report. “It would have been nearly a half billion dollar contract. That same amount that shows up in this report, which was drawn up three months later and is scheduled to take effect next month. Odd, right?”

  “Yeah,” Jake agreed behind her.

  “But here’s where things get really interesting.” She pulled up another set of accounts. “This is a wire transfer from an account held by known Afghani terrorists into an anonymous offshore account that they just happen to have the information for inside Fuller’s office.”

  “So, Fuller is taking bribes?” Jake asked.

  “That’s what I thought at first, too,” Ally said. “But I think it’s a hell of a lot worse than that. He’s selling information.”

  “What information?” Carter asked.

  “I couldn’t figure it out at first. Not until Rhys talked about Mason giving away our location,” she continued on. “See, there is all this information about Special Forces and covert operations in here. That’s what Fuller was selling—the secret locations of Special Forces teams.”

  “But the money from the terrorists is only a fraction of the money from the body armor bill,” Bowie pointed out.

  “That’s because the terrorist money doesn’t mean anything. It’s throwaway money,” she explained. “Fuller’s play is the bill. He sold the location of one of these teams so that those soldiers would be slaughtered. And when that headline blows up, he is going to go back to his subcommittee and throw it in their faces. He’ll be on every major news organization shouting that the only reason those men died was because his bill didn’t pass the first time around. I guarantee you no one will vote that bill down this time.”

  A tense silence filled the room.


  “Are you sure?” Carter asked after a long pause.

  Ally turned and looked him in the eye.

  “I am,” she said.

  The same hard expression that she’d seen on Carter’s face when he’d been dealing with their attacker earlier, was back.

  Ally glanced around the room and saw a similar cold determination in every single face. She had the feeling that what she’d discovered had cut these guys down to the bone. She might joke and grumble at their bullheadedness, but she knew there wasn’t a one of them that wouldn’t have given his life in service to his country, and the thought that one of the country’s leaders was willing to sell out their brothers was the worst kind of betrayal.

  But at least, now that Ally knew what she was dealing with, she could stop him.

  Except, Ally had the feeling she was getting ahead of herself. She didn’t have everything. That bastard, Lucas Addams, was right. She was missing a piece.

  “The only thing I can’t figure out is who Fuller was planning on selling out,” she said. “There’s nothing in Harvey’s files that tells me which one.”

  “Maybe he didn’t know,” Rhys said.

  Ally shook her head. “Lucas Addams said Harvey had access to everything about the plan. Everything. It was on that flash drive, but it’s not here.”

  “Charlie said she copied everything off of that disk,” Carter said.

  Ally shrugged. “She must have missed something. If not, Fuller’s men wouldn’t be after it now.”

  “Easy, call and ask her to go through it again,” Jake said.

  “No,” Bowie said, his voice so low it practically rumbled the floorboards. “We’re not pulling her into this any deeper than we already have.”

  Jake put his hands up. “Easy, man.”

  “Besides she didn’t come into work today,” Bowie said. “I told her to stay home. I had a feeling trouble was coming.”

  Ally’s eyes lit up. “So, there’s still a chance the drive is at the office.”

  Mason crossed his arms in front of his chest. “You mean the one that’s crawling with Fuller’s men.”

  “It can be done,” she said. She looked up into the eyes of the five most skeptical faces she’d ever seen. She tilted her head to the side. “Hey, I got past all of you didn’t I?”

  She smiled at their silence.

  “Not me,” Bowie said.

  “Don’t sell the lady short yet. The night’s still young,” Mason said, clapping him on the shoulder.

  Jake straightened his shoulders as he looked at Carter. “I guess that means we’re going to need a plan, Captain.”

  “Wait,” Ally said, looking up at them. “You’re coming with me?”

  “You didn’t think we were going to leave you alone to have all the fun on your own did you?” Mason asked.

  Chapter Fifteen

 
Adrienne Bell's Novels