Charged with providing professional investigative services to air force commanders, the OSI conducted criminal investigations and counterintelligence operations around the globe. To accomplish that mission, it fielded more than eighteen hundred federally credentialed special agents. And Cleo had once been one of them.
Cleo was escorted into the general's office. Barnes was a tall, spare man who carried every one of his years of service stamped on his craggy face. Today he wore a set of the new blue-and-gray striped camouflage utilities Cleo had heard were being tested for wear by air force personnel in the field.
"'Afternoon, sir."
The sir was instinctive. So was the urge to whip up a salute. Damn! There was more of the military officer still skulking around in her than she wanted to admit.
"What's good about it?" Barnes growled.
Uh-oh. Things were not going well in OSI-land.
"Get Donovan in here," he barked at his exec. Gesturing Cleo to the chair in front of his desk, he shoved a folder in her direction. "While we're waiting, you might as well take a look at this."
This was an OSI file on one Captain Douglas Caswell, tanker pilot, currently deceased. Cleo absorbed the details like a sponge sucking up water. Born, Minneapolis. Graduated University of Minnesota near the top of his class. Completed undergraduate pilot training in 1997, tanker training the following year. Upgraded to command pilot in minimal time. Earned an Air Medal and one oak leaf cluster during initial Afghanistan surge, another cluster for support of Iraqi operations.
Pretty impressive, until you got to the index of cases in which Caswell was named as either a contact or a possible suspect.
"Busy guy," Cleo murmured, skimming the executive summaries. "Investigated for possible black marketeering in Turkey. Named as suspect in a computer porn case, but never charged. Believed to be the instigator of a regularly occurring poker game."
Her brows lifted.
"Since when does the OSI investigate poker games?"
Barnes shifted the Meerschaum from one corner of his mouth to the other. "Since Captain Caswell relieved a senior senate staffer of roughly six thousand dollars during a Congressional junket."
Her lips pursed in a silent whistle. The captain played for high stakes. Flipping the file open, she was treated to a digitized image of what she assumed was formerly Doug Caswell's skull.
"We're waiting for the autopsy report," Barnes informed her. "Preliminary indications are he took two.45 slugs to the back of his head."
Ouch! One would have done the trick very nicely, thank you. Whoever put the captain down had wanted to make damned sure he never got up again.
"The shots were fired at close range, from a silenced pistol."
"Where and when?"
"Monday night, between seven and eight p.m., London time. Caswell was at his flat a few kilometers from Royal Air Force Base Mildenhall."
"Any witnesses?"
"No."
"Suspects?"
"None so far, but given the captain's extracurricular activities, the list could turn out to be a long one."
"What about forensics?"
"The Brits are still working the ballistics on the bullets. They also lifted fingerprints and DNA from the flat, but I suspect this shooter was too smart to leave his behind. I don't suggest you hold your breath."
Cleo didn't intend to. Nor did she intend to go into any situation blind. "There's an OSI detachment at RAF Mildenhall. They have responsibility for working a case like this in conjunction with the local constabulary. Why did the Brits request reinforcements?"
The pipe made another shift. The general's eyes narrowed to a skin-searing laser. "That's what I'm sending you and Donovan to find out."
As if on cue, the exec rapped on the door and stuck his head in. "Major Donovan's here, sir."
He stepped aside and Jack strode in-tall, tanned, with tawny hair and those ridiculously thick, gold-tipped lashes fringing his blue eyes. Like the general, he was in BDUs, but his were the standard green and brown that looked baggy on most everyone else but molded Donovan's muscular frame. The pants were neatly bloused in his shiny black boots, the sleeves rolled up to reveal the scattering of sun-bleached blond hair on his arms.
Cleo's stomach did a funny little flip-flop. Pretty ridiculous, considering she'd spent several quality hours with the man just two weeks ago. Maybe the fact that they'd both been naked and breathing real hard at the time had something to do with her suddenly constricted blood flow.
"Sir."
Donovan tipped a nod in his boss's direction, but his eyes were all over Cleo. A happy sound thrummed at the back of her throat. It stayed there until Barnes yanked his pipe from his mouth and lanced the stem at her like a sword.
"The last case you worked cost the air force a cargo ship and tons of munitions, North. Don't blow anything up on this one!"
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11/10/2008
THE MIDDLE SIN Page 30