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on the elevator and Gabriel said, “Which floor?” I hesitated. He turned to the young man beside him and said, “James Morgan’s office?”
The guy pressed the button.
The elevator cleared out before the top floor. As I watched the last numbers pass, I turned to Gabriel.
“Can I handle this?” I asked. “Having you speak for me isn’t going to help.”
After a moment’s thought, Gabriel nodded. Then the elevator doors opened and we stepped off.
CHAPTER THREE
W hile the top floor is reserved for his company’s executives, James likes to maintain a non-corporate feel, with open areas where people can congregate. That’s where we found him, standing at the espresso machine, laughing at something one of his employees had said.
When I saw him, I felt as if I’d woken from a nightmare. The encounter with the deprogrammers was so ludicrous it couldn’t be anything but a figment of my overworked imagination.
This
was the James I knew, making coffee for himself and those gathered around him. Down-to-earth, easygoing, always helpful and considerate.
When James noticed me, he smiled, eyes crinkling as he turned toward me, as if thinking,
Huh, that deprogramming stuff works fast.
Then he spotted Gabriel, and I saw exactly what Gabriel must—something twisted and ugly simmering behind James’s eyes. No, not “something.” Obsession.
“I take it Palmer didn’t tell you he screwed up,” I said.
“Palmer?” James looked from Gabriel to me. “I have no idea what this is about, but we should talk in my office.”
“Sorry,” I said. “But if we do this in private, this time it might be me who ends up in a jail cell on charges of trespassing and assault. You may know Palmer by another name, but that seems to be the one he used in his e-mail exchange with you.” I stepped toward him. “I really don’t appreciate being held at gunpoint.”
“Gunpoint? Is this about last night? If you think I had anything to do with that—”
“I mean this morning. Yep, it happened again, and this time you had everything to do with it. Palmer confirmed you’re his client, James.” I took out my phone. “Let me forward you the e-mail where you discussed terms with him in case you’ve lost it.”
“E-mail . . . ? I’m
completely
lost here, Olivia, but if you have an e-mail that appears to come from me, someone has set up a dummy account.”
“It’s your personal address.”
“Then it’s been hacked or spoofed. Yes, send it to me, and I’ll have my technicians prove that.”
“I’m sure they will,” Gabriel murmured behind me.
“Is anyone talking to you?” James snapped, and when he did, several employees who’d been wandering off looked over. This didn’t sound like their boss; it sounded like a peevish little boy.
“Whatever this is, Walsh,” James said, “it’s none of your business.”
“Anytime you hire someone to put a gun to Olivia’s head and kidnap her, I’ll make that my business.”
James turned to me. “Why the hell would I hire someone to kidnap you?”
“Because, apparently, I’m being brainwashed by . . .” I jerked my thumb toward Gabriel.
“Well, that’s the first sensible thing you’ve said since you got here. I wouldn’t call it brainwashing, but it’s clearly something, and obviously someone else is as concerned as I am about it.”
“And hacked your e-mail to hire people to ‘deprogram’ me? Who would do that?”
James paused, mental wheels turning. Then he looked straight at Gabriel. “Only one person.”
“Yes,” Gabriel said dryly. “I hired men to waylay us in my parking garage.”
“I’m sure you’d use whatever scenario would allow you to play the white knight.”
“Actually, Olivia extricated
herself
from the situation. But your choice of wording is interesting, given that the men who attacked us used a similar phrase.”
“We know what you did, James,” I said. “We have proof. Back off. Now.”
“Or else?” James
David Sherman & Dan Cragg