of the command desk, his long chino-clad legs crossed at the ankle and his large, muscular arms folded across his very substantial chest. Not a weightlifter type, from the lean-waisted look of him, just built to a larger scale than most. Making all six feet of Jack Delancey seem short and slight in comparison. The neatly trimmed salt-and-pepper Van Dyke beard gives Shane the look of a supersize jazz musician. The watery blue eyes are soulful, but pure cop, always watching.
âHeard of you,â the big man says, focusing on Naomi. âJack says youâre the best, and that includes me.â
Naomi smiles, shrugs. âWe do different things. Or do things differently. Probably both.â After a momentâs pause, she begins again. âNormally when interviewing a potential client Iâd wait for the rest of my team to be assembled and then record a formal statement, but since this is hardly a standard situation, please go ahead. Weâll do the legal stuff later, when our attorney is present.â
âThere isnât much time,â Shane responds, fidgeting, his big hands busy making fists. âThis wonât be a normal arrest,â he cautions. âOnce they take me, Iâll likely be transferred to an undisclosed location for interrogation. A form of in-country rendition. No lawyers, no communication. Thatâs how they do it.â
âWho are âthey,â Mr. Shane? Please be specific.â
âRandall, please, or just plain Shane.â
ââTheyâ?â Naomi persists. âExplain. Elaborate.â
âSorry. Whatever covert agency is about to frame me for the murder of my client.â
âYour client?â
He nods, looking mournful. âJoseph Keener, MIT professor. His son, Joey, is missing, thatâs why he contracted me. In all likelihood Iâm responsible for Professor Keenerâs death. I didnât kill him, but theyâll make it look that way. The evidence will be rock solid.â
âWhat covert agency?â
Shane shakes his head. âIâm not sure,â he begins, âbut my best guess is an agency associated with the Department of Defense. Or possibly Homeland Security. My client was working on a top-secret project, and itâs possible thatââ
And thatâs when the windows explode, covering us all in diamonds of shattered safety glass. The security alarms start to whoop but thereâs no time to react, let alone flee to the safe room. Through the sudden breach swing half a dozen gun-wielding thugs wearing black ski masks. In less than a heartbeat thereâs a second explosion and somehow a wire net engulfs Randall Shane, and they take him down like a wild animal, hitting him with several tranquilizer darts through the net, until he sighs and stops struggling.
Unconscious, maybe dead.
Thatâs all I can see from under my little desk, face burrowing into the thick carpet. That and the shiny black boots standing an inch from my head.
Chapter Two
Tea & Sympathy, Not
T he first time I ever laid eyes on Naomi Nantz she had a bad toothache. I was the office manager for an association of dentists in Cambridge and she came in as an emergency appointment. Barely got through the door before fainting from the pain. By which I mean she stated her name and then her eyes rolled up and she dropped to the floor. Apparently sheâd been ignoring a deep abscess in a lower left premolar for a couple of weeks, due to being involved in a case, and finally her body said thatâs enough, weâre turning off the lights. Thatâs how Dr. Pavi, our really excellent oral surgeon, explained the situation when she regained consciousness. Then he ever so gently put her back under, did whatever he needed to do, successfully and with a minimum of fuss. From then on Naomi Nantz was one of our loyal patients. Came in every three months for a deep cleaning and, because she misses nothing, apparently took