Stalked - By Allison Brennan Page 0,12
who will look for any reason to expel you. Keep your nose clean.”
“He wants me out of here?”
“It’s complicated. I can’t go into detail.”
“You mean you won’t go into it. Don’t I deserve the truth?”
Kate stood. “I’m sorry, Lucy.”
“Kate—”
Lucy wished she hadn’t sat down, because now Kate towered over her. “You wanted to get here on your own merits, but nothing is done in a vacuum. It doesn’t matter if you’re J. Edgar Hoover’s granddaughter or the prodigy of Eliot Ness, people have long memories, and some people want to tear down more than lift up. Never forget it. It’s politics, Lucy, and if you want to survive you’ll blend in. Being right or intelligent isn’t going to save you. Being smart might.”
“Keeping me in the dark isn’t going to help, either!”
Kate walked out, firmly shutting the door behind her.
“Dammit!” Lucy walked over to the door, ready to go after Kate, then rested her forehead on the frame. She needed answers, and Kate wasn’t going to give them to her yet.
But she knew the one person who could find them.
She strode over to her bag and grabbed her cell phone.
Sean answered on the second ring. “Lucy, I just walked in and was going to call you. You must be psychic.”
“Maybe I am.” She sat at her desk and rubbed her forehead with her free hand. “I need a favor.”
“It’s not a favor when it’s for the woman I love. What do you need?”
“I think I may have rubbed one of my instructors the wrong way, and I have no idea how or why. I don’t know anything about him, other than his name is Rich Laughlin and he’s an SA out of the Detroit field office. I can’t risk asking—”
“I know exactly what you need, and I’ll get it without tripping any alarms.”
Always, she could depend on Sean. “You’re amazing.”
“Luce, why not talk to Kate?”
She sighed. “Because Kate knows why and she won’t tell me.”
“She knows this guy is harassing you?”
“I wouldn’t say harassing, more … closely observing.”
“I already hate him.”
“Kate doesn’t like him, either, which makes why she’s being so tight-lipped about him even more strange. I want to keep this quiet for now. When we learn something, I’ll talk to her.” The tension of the day dissipated. “How was Sacramento?”
“Same old. I’ll tell you about the job when I see you this weekend—I am seeing you.”
It wasn’t a question. “As far as I know, I can leave.”
“I hear a ‘but’ in your voice.”
“It’s about me not making waves.”
“Is that what this Laughlin thing is?”
“Something Kate said. But, no matter what, I’ll find some way to see you.”
“It’s been nearly four weeks, Lucy—I miss you.”
“I miss you, too.” She bit her lip, needing to tell Sean about the dead writer but not quite sure how to explain it. “There’s something else that happened. Remember that reporter who called me before I reported to Quantico?”
“Rosemary Weber. Of course I remember her. She upset you.”
“She was murdered last night. Suzanne Madeaux called me.”
“Why are the feds involved?”
“Because Weber was writing about a federal investigation.”
“Did Suzanne tell you why she gave Weber your name?”
“She said she didn’t. I believe her, Sean. I should have asked her four weeks ago.”
“Does she know who spilled the beans about you? Because Weber never called me.”
“Suzanne promised to research the leak. Tony is heading to New York to consult with Suzanne and the NYPD, and I’m sure he’ll fill me in when he returns. My supervisor has forbidden me from following up with Suzanne without her permission.”
“You focus on getting your badge. I’ll call Suzanne and let you know what I learn.”
Lucy smiled. “Thanks.”
“Thank me in person, this weekend.”
CHAPTER SIX
New York City
Suzanne was ten minutes late to the restaurant and Joe DeLucca was already there—with two cold bottles of beer in front of him.
She grabbed the full beer. “Thanks.”
“I knew you’d come.”
“Maybe I’m a figment of your imagination.”
“I ordered our pizza.”
“I became a vegetarian.”
Joe laughed, thin lines framing his eyes. A familiar flutter spread through her body. Suzanne didn’t want any of the old feelings. She didn’t want to remember how much she’d once cared.
She stared at him. “How’s Stephanie?”
He scowled. “Don’t.”
“Same old, same old.” She drank a long swallow of beer. “Okay, sorry. Ex-wife is off the table. But this”—she gestured between them—“is work only, Joe, nothing more.”
“Seeing someone?”
“More or less.” Less right now. For the past year, she’d hooked up with her best friend and sometime lover Mac whenever she wanted company. Mac was