a baggy gray suit who limped awkwardly, his fat briefcase in his right hand.
The white-haired gent put out his hand. “It’s been too long, Beth.”
“Crazy schedules all around, Sam.”
“Hello, Chief,” said Jarvis Burns, the man in the baggy suit.
“I don’t think either of you ever met my sister, Mace.”
“Mace, this is Sam Donnelly and Jarvis Burns.”
Donnelly gave Mace a searching look. “I’m really surprised we’ve never run into each other before.”
“I’ve been away for a while.”
“I know. What happened to you was a case of prosecutorial overreach. That is my personal opinion,” he hastily added. “Off the record.”
“We know the president loves Mona,” Beth said grudgingly.
“And I serve at his pleasure,” added Donnelly.
When Mace looked at him inquiringly Beth explained, “Sam is the DNI, Director of National Intelligence.”
“Yes, but Jarvis here does all the heavy lifting,” amended Donnelly. “I just try to keep everyone playing nicely together.”
“Then I’ll let you and Beth get to it.”
“Nice meeting you, Mace,” said Donnelly while Burns opened his briefcase. But his gaze trailed her until the door shut.
“She just got out, didn’t she?” said Donnelly as he seated himself at Beth’s small conference table.
“That’s right.”
“Any plans?”
“Some things in the works.”
“I hope things come together for her.”
“They will.”
CHAPTER 11
TWO PATROL COPS, one senior and one junior, were admiring Mace’s Ducati when she came out of HQ.
“Nice ride,” said the older blue as Mace slid onto the seat.
“Yes, it is,”
she said.
“Ducati?” he said, looking at the name label.
“An Italian-engineered street machine that once you ride it, you dream about it.”
The younger cop checked out her lean, buffed figure and pretty face and his mouth edged into a grin. “Wanta take me for a ride one night? Maybe we can share a dream.”
“Get back to your shift and stop wasting time talking to excons!” The voice came with such a bark that both cops and Mace jumped. When Mace saw who it was, her hand went reflexively to the spot where she would normally wear her sidearm.
The two cops faded away as the woman marched forward.
Mona Danforth had on her usual expensive two-piece Armani suit, and a bulky litigation briefcase large enough to carry the fates of several targets of the lady’s professional ambition tapped against one shapely leg. To add insult to injury, Mona was tall and exceptionally lovely and not yet forty. The way her blond hair curved around her swan neck Mace had to grudgingly concede would turn most guys to mush. She had legs about as long as Mace’s entire body. She’d graduated from Stanford Law School, where, of course, she’d been editor in chief of the law review. She was married to a sixty-five-year-old multimillionaire based in New York who provided all the financial resources she would ever need and wasn’t around very much. She lived in a fabulous penthouse with wraparound terraces near Penn Quarter that he’d bought for her. And her looks, money, and power position weren’t even the primary reasons that Mace hated her guts, although they certainly didn’t hurt.
Mace knew that being U.S. attorney for D.C. was just another stepping stone on the climb up for the woman. Mace had heard that Mona had her life all mapped out: a short stint as the U.S. attorney for D.C., then attorney general of the United States, next a court of appeals position, and then the prized plum, a lifetime appointment to the United States Supreme Court. When she was wasn’t trying and winning cases by any means necessary, including bending the rules until they shattered from the torque, she was lining her pockets with all the political favors she would need to fulfill that ambition.
She had already been to the White House for dinner, not once but twice. Her hubby had been a big donor to the current president’s election campaign. Beth Perry, who’d reached the top of her profession on hard work and guts and by playing by the rules, hadn’t even been invited once. That still rankled her little sister.
Mona stopped and looked down at Mace, who sat astride her Ducati, her helmet dangling in one hand.
“My God,” said Mona. “You look like shit. I figured you weren’t nearly as tough as people made you out to be, and I guess I was right. And, hell, you were only in a kindergarten lockup for two years. Just think what a hag you’d be if you’d done the proper time in a max. A deuce for that was a joke. Thank goodness for you that big sister was