aspects of what Conall did. Maybe.
His fingers tightened rhythmically on the steering wheel as his attention was arrested by an obviously official, handsome brick building. Oh, damn. That was the new public safety building right there, housing the police station and city government. It was linked to the equally new courthouse by a glass-enclosed walkway.
The knowledge that Niall and Con’s big brother Duncan might be in there right this minute unsettled him more than he wanted to admit. God. Was he going to have to see Duncan?
He knew the answer. Yes. This was his operation. He had an obligation to liaise with local law enforcement. Which meant newly appointed Police Chief Duncan MacLachlan.
The sense of unreality swept over Conall again. Was God playing a nasty prank on him?
He’d tried to say no to this assignment. The suits upstairs didn’t like the word. Yes, they understood that he’d applied for a position with FAST—the Foreign-Deployed Advisory and Support Teams—that were interjected where needed abroad. The decision would not be made immediately. Even if he was chosen, the transfer could wait.
Somebody, somewhere, had noticed that he was, apparently, the only agent within the entire DEA from this particular corner of Washington State. Con had no idea why the fact that he’d gone to high school here was considered to be an advantage. He wouldn’t be conducting some kind of deep cover investigation that required him to have to act like a local. Good God, he’d fail if that was the object; he didn’t recognize half the businesses he was passing on the main street of the modest-size county seat.
The man who had ridden for the most part quietly in the passenger seat beside Conall said now, “Do you have family here?”
Conall wanted to lie, but knew he wouldn’t get away with it. “Yes,” he said shortly. “Two brothers. One is the police chief.”
Jeff Henderson looked thoughtfully at him. “Handy.”
Conall grunted.
He didn’t know Henderson, had never worked with him, but hadn’t learned anything bad about him, either, when he asked around. Henderson had been dragged in from the El Paso division. Apparently Seattle was currently conducting some major, named operation that had everyone excited and left them understaffed when something new cropped up.
“We’re not stopping?”
Oh, crap, Conall thought. They should. Or he should have set up a meet.
“No. I’ll call Duncan. I don’t want word to get around that a couple of DEA agents are in town.”
Henderson nodded, apparently satisfied. “You know your way?”
“Yeah.” He was a little startled to realize how clearly he remembered every byway in the county.
The town proper fell behind them, although they didn’t leave the city limits, which had been drawn by an optimist. Or maybe, he discovered, a realist after all since they passed several major new housing developments and an elementary school that hadn’t been here in his day.
They did shortly find themselves on a typical country road, however, with a yellow strip down the middle and no shoulders to separate road from ditches. Homes were on acreage now; animals grazed behind barbed wire or board fences with peeling paint. The countryside was pretty, though, the grass lush, maples and alders bright with spring greenery, a scattering of wildflowers adding cheer to the roadside. Deciduous trees gave way to forests of Douglas fir and cedar in the foothills, above which glimpses of white-peaked Cascade Mountains could be seen.
Henderson kept his thoughts to himself, although he eyed the scenery with interest. Conall found himself reluctantly wondering about his temporary partner. Normally he tried not to get personal, but this was the kind of job that would have them spending long hours together. They’d get to know each other one way or another.
“You married?” he finally asked.
Henderson glanced at him. “Yeah. I have two kids, four and six. You?”
“No. No wife, no kids.” God forbid.
“You know this house is stuffed full of kids.”
That snapped Conall’s attention from the road ahead. “What?”
“You didn’t know?”
He frowned. “I got pulled in at the last minute. All I was told was that the home-owner is willing to let us use the attic and will feed us.”
“She runs a foster home. Records show she currently has three kids, but I guess from what she told Phillips, she has another two on a real short-term basis.”
“Five children?”
“That’s the word.”
Conall groaned. “Does the attic door have a lock?”
“If not, we may want to install one,” Henderson said, faint amusement in his voice.
“If we have to deal with kids, you’re the specialist.”
“Okay.” He leaned forward. “Is