The Seven Year Itch (12 page)

BOOK: The Seven Year Itch
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Chapter 15

 
 

Late
Friday Afternoon…

T
he sun hung high in the
afternoon sky by the time J.J. dragged herself out of bed. She trudged to the
bathroom for a hot shower. Needed to restore life into her tired, haggard body.
She and Tony wouldn’t arrive at the office until late in the afternoon since
they’d pulled a late-nighter. As the lead agent on the case, J.J. kept all of
Karat
’s information with her overnight.
Not that she didn’t trust Tony implicitly. She figured she should be the one to
take the fall if Jack caught them. After all, it was her idea to take the
package home in the first place. Her stake in keeping them safe was
considerably higher too. Her source’s fate, and indeed her own, depended on her
ability to make smart moves over the next few days. She must get the
information to the vault and exploit it for any and every clue that might lead
her to
ICE Phantom
.

On the face of it, all the information appeared rock solid,
the best intelligence from any source they’d ever recruited in the past. Still
they needed to follow certain procedures, if for no other reason than to
protect themselves from insider spies and double agents. She only hoped they
could keep Chris and case-stealing Lana at bay and stop the intelligence hemorrhage
before too late. Tony’s early morning suggestion to report Plotnikov’s drop to
Cartwright was as good a choice as any. She trusted Jim, not implicitly but
more so than any other person of authority.

J.J., torn about the day’s wardrobe, finally opted for a navy
blue pant suit with a white button-down blouse over the Dockers then she headed
to the office. Stress fueled her appetite, and she was starved, craving her
favorite coffee. But she couldn’t stop, not until she arrived at headquarters
and locked up the drop materials. The sewage from the cafeteria pawned off as
coffee would have to do. As she sucked in a cleansing breath to calm her
thoughts, her phone rang.

“McCall,” she answered

“McCall. Ha!” Jake said. “You mean McCrazy, don’t you?! Where
the hell is my Charger?”

“Great balls of fiyah! Why, whatever do you mean, Sir?” she
snorted, her voice steeped in deep Southern syrup and an octave higher than
normal. “I
de
-clare, I have no
i
-dea what you are referring to, Mr.
McGee.”

“I’m referring to the pink convertible clown car sitting in
my parking space this morning!”

“You asked for it, you got it.” J.J. said, trying to contain
the laugh but exploded before she could lock it down. Jake’s demeanor sounded
somewhere between mildly amused and annoyed as hell.

“Yeah, yeah . . . yuk it up,” Jake said. “Just remember, he
who laughs last, laughs best.”

“Why Mr. McGee? If I didn’t know betta, I’d
swear
you were
threatenin’
me.”

“No ma’am,” Jake said, putting on an accent of his own. “I’m
a gentleman. We don’t make threats...we make
promises
.”

“All right, all right, already!” she conceded. “I’ll call the
police and tell them to pull your car around. But let this be a lesson to you,
Jake. I
always
keep my promises.”

“Yeah, yeah,” Jake said. “Will that be all?”

“Don’t be mad. It’s like you always say,” J.J. said,
snickering in Jake’s annoyance, “when all hell breaks loose, only the devil
survives. I’m the devil today.”

“Don’t sweat it, J.J.,” Jake said. “My turn is coming...”

Moments later she pulled into the FBI Headquarters garage.
Her stomach growled in a sound audible to outsiders. She’d considered chewing
her arm out of the socket and slapping the appendage between a couple pieces of
toast. As soon as she locked the drop materials securely in her cabinet safe,
she’d run upstairs. Food was a necessity before the research commenced.

At the elevators, she ran into Tony and exchanged greetings.
He looked rather fetching in his Dockers and denim blue-colored button down. He
juggled a cardboard drink carrier containing two Starbuck coffees; the hazelnut
aroma seized her senses. The Dunkin Donuts bag was no doubt filled with their
favorite blueberry muffins. He had anticipated the suffering they’d endure
after their long night.

 
J.J. held the door
open for Tony and a choir of hushed whispers met them when they entered.
 
The room was eerily quiet with the exception
of a few agents huddled around their colleague’s cubicles. She glanced back at
Tony and his eyebrow raised. No one noticed that they had walked in, each was
so engrossed in their conversation. But J.J. sensed the anxiety, and their
colleagues’ faces were each painted with distress. A wave of uncertainty
flitted through her mind.

 
The weight of the
briefcase in her hand jolted J.J., reminded her that she had a mission to
accomplish. Refocused, she charged straight for the vault and swiped her badge.

A red light.

Her brow furrowed. She tried again.

“What the hell is going on? I can’t get in!” J.J. placed her
finger in the biometric reader and scanned her badge several times. The light
blinked red again—no entry.

Hmmm
, she thought.
Maybe the lock’s malfunctioning.

Then her second thought: Maybe Sabinksi had found out she and
Tony had misrepresented information on their administrative reports for months.
Maybe he’d revoked their access. Suddenly, her face warmed as if she had a
103-degree fever.

“Here, let me try.” Tony sat down the coffee and bag on the
floor beside his feet scanned his badge. Same result.

“Something’s wrong. Very wrong,” J.J. said.

 


 

 

 
 

Admiring his new discoveries, the new agent
listened as the patter of feet tapping across the upstairs floors. The team was
headed toward the basement entrance.

“Copy that. We’re on the way!” a colleague called out over
the radio.

The agent smiled smugly. He couldn’t wait to get back to the
squad. A rookie they called him. Junior. They’d have to respect him now. This
was the ideal way to kick off his counterintelligence career. He set the box of
black trash bags, a carton of Crayola chalk, two rolls of white duct tape, and
several case files classified “Top Secret—Human Intelligence” on top of the
desk, then searched the area for more evidence.

Even as a new agent fresh out of Quantico, he had been
trained to recognize traditional spy tradecraft. Chalk and duct tape were often
used to mark signals. Trash bags concealed classified documents so they
wouldn’t be destroyed if left outside in the elements. Rudimentary but
effective—and classic Russian tradecraft. The file had probably been intended for
the next dead drop. Fortunately for the Bureau, Sabinski’s previous drop would
be his last.

When he rose from the desk chair to place the items in the
evidence bag, one of the floor panels gave way beneath his feet.
Floor panels on a basement floor?
he said
to himself. Most people install Berber carpet, pile, or even ceramic over the
concrete. Curious. He lifted a loose plank and then blinked rapidly. Thousands
in unmarked hundred-dollar bills lay beneath his feet. He pulled a stack from
the floor and flipped through each, carefully eying the serial numbers. All
sequential.

Son of a bitch!

“Well, I’ll be damned, Junior! Look at what you dug up!” his
senior colleague said as he peered through the door. “We’ve got ourselves a
spy!”

 


 

 

 
 

The Espionage Unit agents were solemn and
quiet, some visibly angry. A misty-eyed Lana emerged from her cubicle and
approached them. J.J. couldn’t stand the sound of her voice—she or her
partner-in-crime for that matter. They always made her eyelids tingle.

“Lana, what’s going on? We, uhhhh, needed to get a file from
the vault and neither one of our badges work.”

“Oh my God, so nobody’s spoken to you.”

“Spoken to us about what?” Tony said.

Lana tugged on Tony’s arm and pulled him aside; J.J. closed
in the circle.

“It’s Jack. He’s been arrested for committing espionage.”

“What!” Tony and J.J. yelled in unison.

“When...when did this happen?” J.J. asked, overcome with
shock. She’d witnessed Jack choke down a lot of food in her time, but never his
just desserts. Finally, they’d been served on a hot platter. Her joy swelled.
Had she sufficient floor space, she’d have turned a cartwheel and a backflip or
two.

“Only moments ago. Apparently he failed his polygraph exam so
badly Cartwright got an emergency search warrant. They found the evidence at
his house in less than an hour. A hundred thousand dollars in cash beneath a
floor panel in the basement. Some Top Secret documents, trash bags, chalk...you
know the drill.”

I knew it! I knew it!
J.J.
thought
.
She’d suspected him all
along. It made perfect sense. All those days he’d accused
her
of compromising her own sources and he’d been the one selling
out the Bureau to the Russians the whole time. While her stomach soured at the
thought of the information that he potentially had passed to his handler, at
least the mystery had been solved.

Tony and J.J. eyed each other knowingly.

She continued. “Yeah. The AD and Freeman revoked everybody’s
vault access and ordered that we all take polys. Jack failed.”

“No one’s informed us yet,” J.J. said. One of Tony’s buddies
had passed some RUMINT, rumor-based intelligence, but they hadn’t officially
been notified.

“Yeah, well apparently everything happened pretty quickly.
They’d planned to notify us today, and I believe they’re still going through
with them.”

“So, how do
you
know?” J.J. asked.

Lana’s mouth fell open, she touched her throat.
“Uhhh...Someone told Chris.”

“Shit!” J.J. yelped as she pressed her fingers against her
eye. Lana had lied, and the itching intensified. She couldn’t take it, would’ve
clawed her own eyes out with her fingernails if she could. J.J. bent and placed
the briefcase on the floor, tried to blink through the tears streaming from her
eyes.

“J.J., what happened?” Lana asked.

“You okay?” Tony asked as she stooped over to get a look at
her eyes. She couldn’t blink them open and so she held them closed until the
sensation passed.

“I’m…I’m okay, now. Just an allergic reaction to this new
eyeliner I tried out this morning.”

“You don’t wear eyeliner,” Tony piped in.

J.J.’s snarl pierced him; he shut up.

Tony looked at J.J. suspiciously, his expression skeptical,
unbelieving. A few seconds later, Chris walked up behind Lana.

“Guess you guys heard about Jack, huh? Good ridden, if you
ask me. Fat bastard. I hope he gets the death penalty. I’d love to see him
roast.”

 
 
 

Chapter 16

 
 

Early
Friday Evening…

A
lthough
their loathing for Jack was quite mutual, J.J. didn’t understand Chris’s
reaction. Why had he had expressed so much hatred for Jack? After all, he was
teamed up with Jack’s golden girl. Everything Jack did to benefit Lana,
inevitably benefited Chris. He should’ve been near tears as was Lana.

Lana’s reaction, her fear, was understandable. She didn’t
want the Bureau to hire a new supervisor whom she couldn’t control with her
breasts, who wouldn’t excuse her ineptness. And if justice existed anywhere in
the world, the AD would replace Jack with a
woman,
a
straight woman who wouldn’t give a damn about the height of her skirt,
the depth of her splits, or the volume of silicone in her cleavage.

Lana’s head snapped around toward Chris and she glared at
him, a fire brewing on her tongue. But instead of exploding, she yielded. “I’m off
to take my poly now. See you guys later.”

Chris watched her hips sway as she walked way. “Good luck
with that.” He turned to Tony and J.J. “They booked him in Alexandria, and I
hear he’s not talking.”

“Not talking? There’s something new and different,” Tony
quipped. “Well, I’m sure they’ll get some agents from Washington Field out
there to grill him before long.”

Chris shifted his glance to J.J. “Oh, by the way, Cartwright
wants to see you in his office immediately. He told me to let you know as soon as
you arrived. Said you should just go on upstairs.”

“Me and
Tony
? Or
just
me
?”

“He didn’t mention Tony. Just you.”

“About what?”

Chris shrugged. “I have no idea; he didn’t say. Why don’t you
get up there and find out?” he asked as he walked away.

J.J. faced Tony, her distress visible.
Why in hell would he want to speak to me without Tony there?
she
asked herself. She didn’t understand.

“Guard this with your life,” she sitting the briefcase next
to Tony’s feet. “I’m going to head upstairs and see what he wants.”

He leaned in and whispered, “You gonna tell him about the
drop?”

J.J. bit her bottom lip, unsure of her response. “I honestly
don’t know right now.” J.J. scanned the area to ensure no one was listening. “I
mean, I realize we’d planned to tell him. But if Lana passes her polygraph
today then he’s going to order us to turn all of the information over to
her
. Let’s just wait and find out what
he has to say.”

 


 

 

 

J.J. tugged on her suit jacket to smooth out
the wrinkles as she approached Cartwright’s open office door. When she peered
through the threshold, he was standing next to a cabinet safe, flipping through
some files. Jim glanced up just as she opened her mouth to speak.

“Ah, Agent McCall. Come in. Have a seat.” He moved back
toward his desk and slipped into his chair. A sullen expression blanketed his
usual jovial appearance. He seemed pensive,
 
more intense.

She took a seat in the guest chair, nervous and somewhat
anxious. She had no idea why he’d asked to meet with her. Maybe he’d heard Jack
had harassed her in the past.

“So I guess you’re wondering why I called you here this
morning,” he asked.

“Uhhh…yes, sir. The question had crossed my mind.”

“I’m assuming you’ve heard about Jack’s arrest,” he asked
matter-of-factly. The supervisor of her unit had been arrested for espionage.
Of course she’d heard. She struggled to contain her elation.

“Yes, sir. Agent Michaels told me the bad news just a few
minutes ago. She didn’t give me any details though.”

“His polygrapher called me yesterday during his exam to
express some serious concerns. He failed his poly and failed it miserably. I
asked Director Freeman to request an emergency search warrant and sent an
evidence team out to his house. Minutes into the search, we found a hundred
grand in cash, trash bags, chalk, duct tape and several case files, including
one for
Karat
.”

Minutes into the search? J.J. found that odd. As an FBI
counterintelligence agent, especially one who had helped draft the Hanssen
damage assessment, seems he could’ve done a better job of concealing the dirt
under the carpet so-to-speak. But she shrugged it off and inhaled deeply. Her
only comfort was that Sabinski didn’t have the real case file. He’d taken the
one with the doctored reporting inside. A surge of anger burst through her as
she thought about his accusations, his indictment on her father’s and Tony’s
father’s pasts. Nothing but the pot calling the kettle black.

Still she had to perform for effect.

“My God.” J.J. pressed her hand against the chest. “But I’ve
had my suspicions. I saw him reading the file yesterday and he hadn’t logged it
out.”

“Is that right?” Cartwright responded.

“Yes, sir. He called me in to tell me
Karat
had been recalled to Moscow.”

A thousand pounds of uncomfortable silence hovered between
them before Cartwright spoke again.

“I’m afraid Jack refuses to talk. After we booked him, he
evoked his Fifth Amendment rights and clammed up. He’s hardly said two words
together since. Except...he’s,
uhhh,
he’s asked to speak to you. And you
alone
.”

J.J. drew her head back stiffly then cocked it to the side.
She wouldn’t have been more surprised if Cartwright stripped naked, sprouted
wings, and flew out the window. Cartwright’s statement struck J.J. as among the
most bizarre ever spoken to her in life. Why in hell would Jack want to speak
to her? She’d be the first person to pull the switch if he got the chair.

“Me? W-why me?”

“That’s what Director Freeman and I would like to know,”
Cartwright responded.

Confused, J.J. shook her head. Her instincts refused his
request long before she could speak the words. “You don’t understand. Jack and
I have a very contentious relationship, to say the least. Now, I hadn’t
previously come forward with complaints. We both know that’s a useless exercise
in this place. But, please understand, we have nothing to say to one another.
And trust me, anything he might say to me wouldn’t be worth listening to.”

Cartwright sat forward in his chair. “J.J., you and I both know
headquarters isn’t that big, and I’ve known Jack since the Academy. Trust me,
I’m well aware of that river of bad blood between you two.”

“Well,
that’s
the
biggest understatement since the discovery of fire.”

He half chuckled. “Jack’s reputation precedes him, but I need
you to talk to him. The Bureau needs you to speak with him. We’ve got to find
out as much as possible about his cooperation. We can’t begin our damage
assessments without his statements. And our secure intelligence collection
channels are still vulnerable. Most importantly, we must adjust our HUMINT operations—both
in the Bureau and throughout the community—so we don’t lose anymore sources.
This is a mission imperative.”

J.J. began to waver against her own will. She looked down at
her lap to gather the strength to fortify her resolve, but to no avail. If
nothing else, she owed it to her dead sources and their families to listen to
what Jack had to say. She didn’t need to say much in return. And the visit
would offer her a prime opportunity to do something she’d wanted to do for
years, gloat and relish in his misery. As she contemplated her concession, the
thought of Jack bound in handcuffs brought her a fountain of joy. She needed no
more convincing.

“I’m asking you to do this as a favor to me. Hear him out,
report back to me, and you’re done. You never need to see or speak to him again
as far as I’m concerned.”

She hesitated, for the sake of show, and then blew out a long
breath. “Okay, okay. I’ll meet him. But if he so much as blinks the wrong way,
with all due respect to you, Mr. Cartwright, he’s going to be
begging
for the death penalty.”

 

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