Page 12
She gave a mental snicker. He probably hated hearing that.
“ Cooperation goes a long way in this business.” The taut set of his mouth created tiny fan lines at the corners of his lips. “ Tell me what you did with all the money you’ve stolen. It might lessen the amount of time you’ll spend wearing an orange jumpsuit.”
Oh , no. I guess inmates really wear those.
She swallowed and tried wresting her chin away. When he didn’t let go, she grabbed his wrist above his jacket sleeve. His skin was warm, with a light coating of springy hairs. “ I — I can’t tell you that,” she whispered.
“ You can.” He moved in closer, his warm breath washing over her face. “ And you will.”
“ No , I —” She began shaking her head. “ Please .”
“ Please what?”
“ Don’t ask me that.”
“ Why , did you spend it all on manicures? Wire it to a Swiss bank account?”
“ No ,” she snapped.
“ What then, jetting to the French Riviera ? Caviar and champagne?” He narrowed his eyes. “ Answer me.”
Fear clawed at her insides. At this rate, she might as well surrender. Gates had her dead to rights, and he knew it. Case closed. No jury. No trial. Do not pass go, go directly to jail.
“ This may be a game for you,” he said, releasing her chin, “but believe me. It’s no game, and people’s lives are at stake.”
“ I know.” Marilyn’s and three small children.
“ You don’t know anything . You and your friends are obstructing a federal investigation. Your little scheme just set my op back for months.”
“ What do you mean?” How could their stealing have done anything negative except piss of the Falzones , which was exactly what she intended?
“ Every time you steal from them to go buy yourself something pretty, it takes me three months to clean up the damage you leave behind.”
“ What are you talking about?” She took a step back. “ And I told you before, we don’t steal for personal gain.”
“ No ? Then why?” He clasped her upper arms. As before, there was no pain in his grip, quite the opposite.
Every one of his fingers branded her skin straight through her suit with a warmth that made her shiver.
“ You have no idea what can happen to a pretty little thing like you in prison. Now for the last time?—”
“ I gave the money away,” she blurted out.
He angled his head. “ To whom?”
She glanced at the ceiling. He was giving her no choice.
“ You’ve got three seconds.”
Forgive me.
Unable to look him in the eye, she stared at the corded muscles in his neck. “ I gave the money to a women’s shelter.”
His hands dropped away, and his eyes went wide as he took a step back. For a full five seconds, which for this guy was probably a record, she detected emotion. Real , live, raw emotion.
Steely gray eyes pinned her again, but for the first time since he’d busted into her place, she detected no anger. Dark brows furrowed, and renewed fear tingled along her backbone.
He doesn’t believe me.
“ I’m telling you the truth.” She held out her hand in a pleading gesture. “ These women have no one to turn to. Their husbands will kill them and their children. They need cash to escape, to get new identities, to?—”
“ I know how women’s shelters work.” He tilted back his head and took a deep breath.
“ That money”—she nodded to the duffel—“is for a woman and her three children to get set up on the west coast. As soon as she’s released from the hospital, that is. Her husband beat the crap out of her and almost got to the children.”
The shock had long since faded from Gates’s face, replaced by a blank look.
“ I know you’re going to arrest me no matter what I say,” she continued, “but believe me when I say we never stole anything for personal gain. We gave it all to the shelter.” Still no reaction.
“ And if that’s not a good reason to steal from a bunch of murdering, thieving mobsters, I don’t know what is.
” The blank look on Gates’s face seemed frozen in place.
Another moment of frustrating silence passed. “ Aren’t you going to say something?”
“ Why are you doing this?” he asked. “ What do you get out of it? There has to be some kind of reward for you.”
“ There is no reward.” She gritted her teeth. “ Except the satisfaction of doing something good for someone, of helping people who can’t help themselves.” And , at the same time, hurting the dickheads who deserve it.
Gates stared intently, as if gauging her truthfulness. Gina knew she must look and sound credible, because most of her tirade was true. Except for the little part she’d withheld about her own personal revenge against Franco Falzone being the icing on the cake.
“ Maybe you’ve been a federal agent for so long you aren’t capable of believing anyone. Maybe it’s left you so jaded you can’t possibly understand there are people in this world who take their reward by giving to others.”
He began stroking his stubbled, square jaw with his good hand, then he started to pace the length of her foyer.
“ Listen to me,” she cried, stepping in his path and nearly getting run down as he strode into the living room to the large window overlooking the East River .
“ You’ve obviously never suffered any personal loss in your life or you wouldn’t be such an emotional iceberg.
Can’t you have compassion for other people’s pain and suffering? ”
Slowly , he turned to face her, and for a second she could swear there was genuine hurt in his eyes. In the time it took to blink once, the look was gone, the chiseled lines of his profile tightening as he turned to stare out the window.
This is so not good. She could see his reflection. He was thinking again. Glowering , even.
Taking a chance, she grabbed his arm. “ What about your job? You help others, don’t you? What you do gets bad people of the streets, criminals who hurt others, shoot them, whack them, whatever. Can’t you understand?”
When he looked down at her, one thing was clear. The man hadn’t heard a word she’d said. It was over. Her impassioned speech had fallen on deaf ears. His heart had to be made of one hundred percent, grade- A ice.
She released his arm and stared out the window right alongside him.
This might very well be the last time she enjoyed the twinkling red, green, and white lights of the many bridges spanning the river.
As a free woman, that was. There was a similar view from the opposite bank of the river. Where the women’s prison stood.
“ I’ll never tell you who my friends are,” she whispered. “ You might as well arrest me and be done with it.”
“ I have no intention of arresting you.”
She snapped her head up to see a strange gleam in his eyes. “ You don’t?”
“ No .” The corners of his mouth lifted. “ I have a better idea.”
Her muscles tightened. Whatever was stewing inside his head was trouble, and the look he was giving her made her feel like prey again—like an animal that knows it’s trapped and at the mercy of a predator. An FBI predator.
“ Only one thing will keep you and your friends out of jail.”
Gina swallowed. “ What ?”
This time he made no attempt to hide his sly grin. “ Work for me.”
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12 (Reading here)
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
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- Page 37
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- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
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- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58