Read Into the Crossfire Online
Authors: Lisa Marie Rice
software, maybe come up with a hit." Sam frowned. "Come to think of it, my
security cameras just outside the door fogged up around seven thirty and then a
few minutes before nine. I didn't think anything at the time, but he could have
been using a--"
"Laser light," Harry and Mike said at the same time.
The lieutenant grunted. "An operator."
"Oh yeah," Sam answered. "An operator. Got in and out real smooth."
The lieutenant rested his elbows on his knees and fixed Nicole with a weary
gaze. "So, we've got a pro breaking into your office, Ms. Pearce. What was he
looking for?"
Nicole shook her head. The sixty-four-thousand-dollar question. "I have no
idea, but he was definitely looking for something. He kept saying, 'Where is it?'"
She cleared her throat delicately. "Actually, he kept saying, 'Where the fuck is it?'
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I have no idea what he was talking about. I tried to say so, but he just ground the
gun more tightly against my head."
All the men looked at her temple. "It's okay," she said to the room. "Just
some torn skin, nothing serious."
Sam closed his eyes in pain.
"So, the intruder was looking for something. For what? He didn't come to
steal those pretty knickknacks you've got, he was looking for something specific.
What?" the lieutenant prodded.
Nicole shrugged her shoulders, baffled. "I can't imagine. I don't think he
was after the watercolors or the silver." It was true that she'd decorated the office
very nicely, with two or three good pieces of family furniture, a little collection of
solid sterling pen holders and an Art Deco leather desk set, all attractive pieces
without, however, any real resale value. The watercolors were lovely, but they
were by her mother, who'd been talented but had never exhibited. They had zero
value on the open market. Nothing in the room had any real value if fenced, except
maybe her desk. But who would enter an office and steal a desk?
"Has anything been taken?" the lieutenant asked.
Nicole looked around her office and shook her head.
"Do you feel like checking that?"
Would her legs support her? Yes, they would, she found as she rose. Sam
rose right along with her and shadowed her as she walked the perimeter of the
room, opening drawers, carefully scrutinizing every surface. Sam stayed so close
she could feel his body heat.
Finally, she made it back to the lieutenant.
"Okay. Everything's where it should be. It looks like he didn't have time..."
Nicole's voice died away as she looked at her computer, head tilted. She kept her
desktop on a separate table, where she worked, and kept only her laptop on the
desk, where she dealt with clients. She used a Knoll office chair on wheels when
at her desktop computer, and it was pulled away from the table. "That's not right."
All the men looked at her.
She walked over and touched the chair back, a foot from the table. "I am
absolutely positive I pushed the chair in under the desk before leaving. I always
do. I like leaving the office in order. Do you think the man was after something in
my computer?" Nicole looked up at Sam, then at the lieutenant.
Sam was already settling into the chair, reaching down to press the button
that would turn the processor on. He pressed it and waited, frowning. He turned
his head up to Nicole. Everyone had gathered around her computer. "I think he
trashed your computer, Nicole."
"No." She pulled her portable hard disk drive from her purse. "I use
portable hard disk drives and always take them home with me, together with my
laptop and backup files on a flash drive. I make my livelihood from my computer
and I never leave anything behind in the office. My computer has some valuable
software and can deal with a fairly broad range of alphabets, so I'd hate to lose
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that. Plus, most of our contracts contain a confidentiality clause, so I make sure
there's a minimal degree of security."
At the word confidential, the lieutenant, Sam, Mike, Harry, the fingerprint
tech and the medic pointed their faces at her monitor like hound dogs flushing
birds.
"Fire it up," Sam growled.
Nicole slid the portable hard disk drive into the designated slot and pressed
the button to turn on the processor. There was utter silence in the room as the
computer pinged and whirred its way to the home page of Wordsmith.
"Password," she said, and the men averted their eyes while she entered the
password to access her files. She had her files organized into clients, languages
and translators. The men stared at the screen as if it could render up the secrets of
the universe.
"What are we looking at here, ma'am?" the lieutenant finally asked.
Nicole gently nudged Sam with her hip and slid into the chair when he
stood. "Okay. What Wordsmith does is translate texts, from ten languages into ten
languages. We work from English, French, Spanish, German, Dutch, Italian,
Russian, Chinese, Polish and Hungarian into the same languages." She thought of
Aidan Berry, who'd been one of her best friends at the Geneva School of
Translation, had fallen in love with a painter in Reykjavik and used to work at an
Icelandic bank, which, like all the other Icelandic banks, had gone belly-up. "We
also would offer economic translations from Icelandic into English, if Iceland still
had an economy."
She sat back, pleased. Wordsmith, her baby. It was pretty special. "Well,
there you have it. It's a fairly straightforward business."
Six utterly blank male expressions. "What?"
The lieutenant pinched the bridge of his nose. "Could you sort of run that
by me again, ma'am?" He nodded his head at the screen. "Show us what we're
seeing? I can't make any sense out of what's on that screen, and we need to make
sense of it. Maybe a man was willing to commit murder for what's in your
computer."
He was right. If the intruder had been at her computer, he'd gone to a lot of
trouble to get something. And if he was after something...she drew in a shocked
breath, swiveling her chair around to face the men. "Oh my God. If he wanted
something from my computer, he didn't get it because the hard disk was in my
purse. That means--"
"He's coming back," Sam said harshly. Nicole looked at the grave faces
surrounding her. They'd come to this conclusion well before she had. She twisted
her hands in her lap, suddenly icy cold.
This was not over.
Sam laid large, warm hands on her shoulders. "He's not getting to you
again, though, honey. I can guarantee you that." She looked up at him. He wasn't
smiling at her reassuringly, trying to make her feel better. He looked grim. And
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deadly. Which actually did make her feel better. "You're coming home with me
and you're staying with me until this fu--asshole is caught. We straight on that?"
Sudden panic had slowed her thought processes, but one thing was clear. "I
can't leave my father, certainly not if he is in any danger. I simply can't do it."
Sam shifted until he could see her eyes. "Someone might be coming after
you. You don't want to take that danger to your father, do you? If this guy is
willing to hurt you, believe me, he won't balk at hurting your father."
Oh God, no, he wouldn't. Nicole remembered clearly the cold command in
her attacker's voice, the menace that emanated off him like vapor off ice, the utter
steadiness of his movements. He wasn't a petty thief, frightened and in over his
head. An operator, Sam had said. By that he meant a man used to violence. Nicole
was not going to lead him to her father, but...
"He'll need protection." Just the thought of someone hurting her father
made her stomach clench, cold sweat break out between her shoulder blades. "I
can't possibly leave him alone to face danger."
"Mike?" Sam pivoted slightly to look his friend in the face.
Mike turned to the lieutenant. "Lieutenant?"
The lieutenant sighed. "Yeah, yeah, I hear you. Okay, I'll post a couple of
men around Ms. Pearce's house. No one will get to her father."
"Triple shifts," Sam said.
The lieutenant winced. "Yeah. Christ, I don't know where I'll get six men
from, but okay, I'll try, at least. I can't guarantee more than a couple of days,
though. Couple days nothing happens, that's it, you're on your own." He shrugged.
"Sorry."
"I'll provide security after that," Sam said. "I know some good men."
Bodyguards, around the clock, indefinitely. Oh God, how could she afford
this? Nicole balanced possible danger against certain bankruptcy and turned to
Sam. Before she could open her mouth, though, Sam squeezed her shoulder. "I'll
take care of it," he said softly.
The lieutenant had been speaking quietly into his cell. He flipped it closed
and looked at Mike and Sam. "Six men, rotation of eight hours, for two days. Best
I can do. They'll be in place inside half an hour."
"I'll pick it up after that," Sam said.
Nicole started to object, out of principle, when the lieutenant interrupted.
"Now that we've got that out of the way, let's see what the guy could have been
looking for. So, show me how your system works, ma'am."
Nicole switched gears. Wordsmith, her baby. The best way to describe it
was to show it.
Nicole went to her files and clicked on the folders. "This is the way my
business operates. A client sends a text to be translated. The client would have
contacted me beforehand and we would have agreed on a quote. The price varies
in relation to the degree of technical difficulty, the rarity of the combination-Dutch into Chinese is going to cost you a lot of money, for instance--and the
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urgency. So when I receive the text, the client has already been given a quote and I
know exactly how much the file he sent me is worth. If it's from Spanish or French
into English, chances are I'll do it, though lately the workload has increased, so I
send what I can't handle to a friend of mine at the Monterey Institute of
Languages. Everything else is sent to one of the translators in my network. I
negotiate the price, receive the text, forward it to the appropriate translator, who
will have the requisite languages and field of expertise, I take care of the billing
and client relations. For that I take a fifteen percent commission. It's not a huge
business; it's only a year old, but it's growing."
The lieutenant grunted. "Show me some of the files. Starting from, say,
three days ago. We don't know where the guy came from, maybe he had to travel
to get here."
"He was American, though," Sam said quietly. "No doubt about that.
Probably ex-military."
"American." The lieutenant nodded. "So--let's go back three days. How
many files?"
Nicole had a chronology function and went back to June 26. She spoke with
her eyes glued to the monitor. "Okay, over the past three days I've received
twenty-two files. Two hundred fifty pages of a travel guide to St. Petersburg from
Russian into English." She clicked the file open and the men stared at the Cyrillic
text. "My Russian isn't very strong, but the title of this is St. Petersburg, Jewel of
the North. It was sent to a professor of Russian at the University of Chicago who
rounds out his salary by doing translations."
She clicked on another folder. "This is a hundred twenty pages of text that
is an analysis of the German bond market, to be translated into English. I sent that
off to the appropriate colleague. And here's a text from Chinese into English,
which costs a premium because good Chinese-into-English translators are rare. A
survey of the banking sector in China. This is the project for the enlargement of
the Port of Marseilles. I'll take that one myself, the Marseille Port Authority is an
old client of mine, I worked for them just out of school, before applying to the
UN." She did some calculating in her head. "In all, a total of almost four thousand
pages."
"What came in today?" Mike asked.
Nicole pointed. "Since this morning, eighty pages of a novel, Spanish into
English, the publisher is hoping for a sale to foreign markets at the Frankfurt Book
Fair in October. The publicity for a trade fair in Buenos Aires, a short treatise on
Napa wines to be translated into French, an Italian paper on microsurgery and a
treatise in Polish on the miracles of Pope John Paul the Second. Tomorrow I
should receive a technical manual on DVD recorders, Japanese to English--that's
going to cost them--which I will send to a student at MIT." Nicole sat back.
"That's it."
"Has anything else arrived since the last time you looked?"
She leaned forward, typing quickly. "I don't know...nope. The only thing
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that has arrived is a copy of a contract and an e-mail from a girlfriend in Geneva.
Who has probably broken up with her boyfriend again."
Silence. She could almost hear the men thinking.
"Do you have any military contracts for translation? Come to think of it, the
military has dealings all over the world. They might outsource some translation
stuff."
"No. I'd have to apply for a security clearance for myself and my
collaborators. I've thought about it, a lot, but have never gotten around to it. I will,