building. He’d nearly missed her exit when a trolley tour vehicle blocked part of his view. “She’s on the move,” he said, resuming some sense of seriousness now, a reminder they were there for work.
Ana had her red hair in a tight bun at the back of her head. A gray pantsuit with white blouse beneath. Black heels. Sleek black sunglasses. He was too far away to see the color of her gorgeous eyes from where he sat, but he remembered them.
A darker green than his. Something akin to the color of the forest back home in Alabama. The same one where he smacked his head on that death trap of rocks.
“Can’t believe she took a promotion and moved to D.C., and I had no idea.” She’d made the move after the one time A.J. had Googled her. Wyatt and Asher had made fun of him for days about that, and he hadn’t Googled her again.
“She deserves the promotion as far as I’m concerned,” Chris commented. “She was pretty talented when we worked with her last year. And hell, she put up with you.”
A.J.’s eye-roll was hidden behind his aviator sunglasses, but the grin on Chris’s face meant he surely felt the scathing look shot his way.
A.J. fidgeted with the brim of his hat. Both he and Chris had ball caps and sunglasses on, but A.J. had the feeling if Ana looked back toward the SUV, she’d recognize them. Shitty Federal agent if she didn’t, he supposed.
The woman seemed like such a straight arrow, but she’d surprised him by rolling out some humor when they worked that case together last year. She had a dry, sarcastic wit, and half the time, he wasn’t sure if she was being serious or if it’d just been a slip, but the way her humor slid off her tongue was sexy as hell.
“She’s not going to her Volvo.” Chris threw a finger toward where Ana walked down the street. “Turning on Eleventh.”
“I can see that,” A.J. said while easing into traffic to keep up with her. He also had to stay far enough away so that a trained agent of her caliber wouldn’t notice him.
“Why is she going that way?” Chris asked when Ana made another turn. Followed by another shortly after.
They were on 10th Street NW, heading back toward the Hoover Building, which made no sense. “Shit. You see that? Damn, she’s got fast hands.” Chris shifted his glasses down a touch as if rewinding the scene to re-watch in slow motion.
“A pass was made. She must have had to collect something from a source, and that’s why the unusual walking loop,” A.J. reasoned.
“Pull over. I better follow that guy.” Chris pushed his glasses back in place as A.J. stopped near the sidewalk. “Hey, don’t give me that look.”
Had A.J. looked at him? Chris was feeling guilty, too, so it would seem.
“We’re supposed to monitor all her interactions,” Chris said as he opened the door. “This is to rule her out as a suspect. Okay?”
“You saying that to make yourself feel better?” But A.J. went ahead and waved him off. “Meet you after.” He hated that they had to spy on her, but the team had been burned before, and he couldn’t turn a blind eye just because he was ridiculously attracted to her.
A.J. waited for Chris to hop out of the SUV, then picked up his pace to catch up with Ana. She’d gone straight to her Volvo and climbed into the driver’s seat.
After a few minutes, he was following her on Pennsylvania Avenue and heading past Capitol Hill, in the direction of her rental, which wasn’t far away.
According to the profile, Ana had moved to D.C. about two and a half months ago after accepting an offer with the CI Division. She’d been living out of a hotel until recently.
“Did I delete my message?” he asked himself while turning up the volume on the radio when the singer Brett Young came on. “I think so.” He expelled a breath through his nose. “Talking to myself again.”
He rolled down his window once he was parallel parked on her street a few houses down from hers. He was close enough to put eyes on her as she exited her Volvo and hurriedly went up the steps to her front door, but far enough away not to draw notice.
Ana stole a look over her shoulder as she stuck the key in the lock as if she sensed someone was there. And damn, she was