A Selection of Recent Titles by Karen E Olson
The Nicole Jones Series
HIDDEN *
SHADOWED *
BETRAYED *
The Annie Seymour Series
SACRED COWS
SECONDHAND SMOKE
DEAD OF THE DAY
SHOT GIRL
The Tattoo Shop Mysteries Series
THE MISSING INK
PRETTY IN INK
DRIVEN TO INK
INK FLAMINGOS
* available from Severn House
BETRAYED
The Nicole Jones series
Karen E Olson
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
First published in Great Britain 2016 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
19 Cedar Road, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM2 5DA.
First published in the USA 2017 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS of
110 East 59th Street, New York, N.Y. 10022
This eBook edition first published in 2016 by Severn House Digital
an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited
Trade paperback edition first published
in Great Britain and the USA 2017 by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD
Copyright © 2016 by Karen E Olson.
The right of Karen E Olson to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8681-1 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-84751-784-5 (trade paper)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-853-7 (e-book)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland
ONE
My name is Tina Adler, and I am an addict.
My addiction is not defined as such by the experts, although I could write an entire chapter on it and then some. There is no twelve-step program, no church basements with pots of coffee and fellow addicts with whom to share stories. No coins to mark sobriety, no common prayer.
The only thing I have is time. One day, one hour, one minute that I count without using.
I’m not naïve enough to think that I won’t relapse. I did once before, and I will again.
Maybe even today.
I am escorted into a cold, concrete room, a metal table and two chairs in the middle. A big mirror adorns one wall, but I’m not stupid. They’re watching me. The door slams shut behind me. I circle the table, running my fingers along its edges, sidestepping the chairs.
The laptop sits in the center of the table. It’s open, the screen dark. I wiggle my fingers before making two fists. I will not touch it.
It’s been thirty-four days since I handed over my laptop. Since I’ve been online. Thirty-four days, ten hours, and thirteen minutes, according to my watch. Yes, I’ve been keeping track. It keeps my mind occupied. I count seconds, minutes, my head spinning with the distraction.
I continue to walk in circles around the table, my eyes glued to the laptop, as though it’s a mirage in the desert and if I look away, it will disappear. I want to feel the keys underneath my fingers, the power surging through me.
The door swings open, startling me, and my heart beats faster.
He comes in, closing the door behind him.
‘I’m Agent Tilman. Please sit.’ He holds a folder with papers in it. How old-fashioned – just like my old-fashioned wristwatch. He indicates the chair next to me and, without waiting, he plops down in the other one across from me. His rumpled suit makes me wonder if he’s slept in it, if he’s been here all night.
He waves his hand again, silently telling me that I should sit, but I keep standing. If I sit, it means I’m here for the long haul. If they’re going to put me away, they might as well just do it. It’s not as though I haven’t been preparing mentally for this for a long time.
I don’t ask if I need a lawyer. Maybe I do, but I don’t have one, and I don’t know where I would find one. If I tell them this, they’ll probably send me a young, overworked, underpaid public defender.
‘I’m sorry for the inconvenience,’ he says, as though he does not hear my heart pounding inside my chest. ‘We felt it would be better to do this here, rather than at your place of business. Less public.’
They were waiting at the bike shop when I rode up this morning, anxious to make a pot of coffee and start my day. It’s slow this time of year – there aren’t as many tourists – but we do repairs, and I have three bikes that need tune-ups. They showed me their badges and said that the shop owners – Beth and Roger Connors – were already at the station. ‘Just routine,’ they said casually, as though having FBI show up at the door was an everyday thing. ‘Just a few questions.’
Agent Tilman frowns. ‘Please sit, Ms White. This shouldn’t take long.’
For a second, I forget my alias, forget that he believes I’m Helen White, and then I mentally shake myself. I am so tense that I’m afraid I’ll break in half if I sit, but I don’t want to disobey, so I do as I’m told. The chair squeaks against the floor as I slide it out, and I settle into it, my arms folded across my chest.
‘Do you recognize this laptop?’ he asks, and again my eyes are drawn to it.
There’s nothing special about it. ‘Not really. Should I?’
‘It was in the office at the bike shop where you work.’
I’m not sure where he’s going with this. ‘And?’
‘Do you use this laptop?’
My heart quickens even more. ‘No.’ I’ve been clean for thirty-four days. I should get a coin for that.
‘You’ve never used this laptop?’ His voice is a low timbre, and his eyes meet mine.
We stare at each other like this for a few moments, and finally I give in. ‘No. I don’t know what you’re looking for here.’ I will myself to stay calm, to keep my voice steady. Agent Tilman clearly thinks I’m connected somehow to this laptop.
I begin to wonder if I should find myself a lawyer.
‘Do you know who does use this laptop?’
I shrug, trying to appear nonchalant. ‘Beth and Roger. It’s their shop. Their laptop.’
‘You’ve seen them use it?’
I am trying not to stare at the laptop, wondering what is going on.
‘Sure. It’s usually in the back office, but I am normally in the shop. I don’t have anything to do with running the business. I do tours sometimes, but mostly I fix the bikes.’ I realize I’m talking too fast, protesting too much, giving him answers to questions he hasn’t asked.
‘So you have seen them use it, Ms White?’
Without thinking, I ask, ‘Did someone use this laptop for something illegal?’
Immediately, I regret my question, but he doesn’t seem fazed by it.
‘That’s what we’re trying to determine.’
I can’t help myself. I start picking apart the possibilities that would lead the FBI to it: child pornography, illegal dru
gs or weapons, human trafficking. I wonder about Beth and Roger. I can’t see them involved in anything like that. They seem too normal. But then again, I seem normal, too.
If the FBI were investigating something, they must have traced the IP address. If I were the culprit, I’d make sure that no one would be able to trace me, so I would reroute the IP address through a VPN. I wonder if this is what’s happened. If someone has done just that, and Beth and Roger are innocent in whatever crime is connected to this laptop. I open my mouth to tell Agent Tilman this, but then shut it again. I don’t want to show my cards. He can’t know what I know. He can’t know that I know anything about rerouting IP addresses. That I have skills that go beyond repairing bicycles.
‘Besides Beth and Roger Connors, have you seen anyone else using this laptop?’ he asks, pulling me out of my thoughts.
‘I really can’t say for sure who has used it and who hasn’t. I know I haven’t.’
‘Do you have your own laptop, Ms White?’
‘No.’ I say it quickly, definitively, because it’s true.
One of his eyebrows rises above the other. ‘No? You don’t own a laptop? What about a desktop computer? A tablet?’ Agent Tilman’s tone has gotten frosty. He doesn’t believe me.
‘I don’t even have a smartphone, Agent Tilman.’
‘That’s unusual in this day and age.’
Maybe I should have lied. Because it is unusual. I quickly say, ‘I don’t want the distraction in my life. I lead a very simple life.’ I pause. ‘What exactly did you find on that laptop?’
He narrows his eyes and purses his lips, and for a second I don’t think he’s going to tell me. But when he finally does, a chill runs through me because I may not be able to escape this time.
TWO
‘Do you know who Tony DeMarco is?’ Agent Tilman is asking.
I shake myself out of my thoughts and try to concentrate. I can’t possibly admit it. That I do know him. That Tony DeMarco was my father’s business associate, that his testimony is what sealed my father’s fate and his death in prison. That I stole from him and he tried to have me killed almost two years ago. That he offered me a job hacking for him.
‘I’ve heard of him,’ I say vaguely. ‘Someone tried to kill him?’
Agent Tilman nods, all the while watching me. I resist the urge to cringe under his stare. ‘He’s going to live,’ he tells me, as though I am concerned about Tony DeMarco’s well-being. ‘But whoever put out the hit on him may go after him again.’
There is probably no shortage of people who want to kill Tony DeMarco, but the more pressing question is: ‘You think that this laptop is somehow involved?’
‘We know it is. Whoever put the hit out definitely had access to it.’
I can’t help but be curious about this. I consider again how easy it would be to reroute the IP address, although now something else strikes me, something that should have occurred to me as soon as he told me about Tony DeMarco.
It’s as though my brain is on a time delay.
Why would someone conveniently either use this particular laptop or reroute the IP address here, where I live? When he is putting out a hit on Tony DeMarco, who is so connected to me in so many ways?
There is no coincidence. Someone knows that I’m here; he wants me to be revealed. He wants me to pay for his crime.
My fingers itch to pull that laptop toward me, to begin a search, to delve deep into it to find out who is doing this. Instead, I fold my hands tightly in my lap and try to concentrate on Agent Tilman, although I keep the laptop in my peripheral vision.
‘Why don’t you have a laptop, Ms White?’
We are back to this. I can’t tell him about my addiction, although one of his colleagues knows it all too well.
FBI Agent Zeke Chapman. He knows I’m here. He knows where I live, where I work.
‘No. I told you, I don’t have a computer.’ I look him straight in the eye when I say it.
Agent Tilman finally seems satisfied with my answer. ‘Do you know whether Beth or Roger Connors knows Tony DeMarco?’
I give a short laugh before I can stop myself. ‘No,’ I say. ‘I doubt it, anyway.’ I have to backtrack. ‘They are very honest people.’
‘Honest is an interesting word to use.’
‘That’s what they are.’ I hear belligerence in my tone, and I regret it immediately when his eyebrow rises.
‘That’s exactly what they say about you,’ he says.
I am pleased to hear it. But it’s not going to get me out of here.
‘What do you know about Jerry McNamara?’
The question throws me for a second, but I see where he’s going with it, and it’s definitely to my advantage. It’s as though a beam of light has penetrated the darkness. ‘Jerry set up the new wireless network at the bike shop. I don’t really know him.’ Could Jerry have done this? I don’t see any sort of motive; Jerry is a local guy and any possible connection to Tony DeMarco would be slim at best. But I’m willing to play along, throw suspicion around so it doesn’t come back at me.
‘He knows computers,’ Agent Tilman states simply.
I shrug nonchalantly. ‘He does.’ My eyes stray back to the laptop. With a few keystrokes I could find out who’d been inside.
Agent Tilman stands. ‘Thank you, Ms White.’ He picks up the laptop, and his expression tells me that he expects me to get up and follow him out. ‘If we have more questions, how can we reach you?’
I give him the phone number at the house, since I don’t have a cell phone.
I don’t see Beth or Roger or Jerry as I am led through the corridor and out through the front. I pass two police officers who stop talking as they watch me leave. I wonder how they feel about lending their interrogation rooms to the FBI, whether they are involved at all in the investigation, or if the FBI commandeered the whole case. I tend to think the latter.
I turn down the offer of a ride and walk back to the shop, my head spinning. I can’t help but think that I’ve dodged a bullet. My identity, for now, is still under wraps; the FBI thinks I am Helen White, bike shop employee and computer Luddite. I can only hope that they don’t go digging. If they do, they will find that Helen White doesn’t really exist, that she has no history before the last few months here in Falmouth.
All it will take is a photograph. Do you know this woman?
Lines will be drawn; they will come after me.
What I need to do is disappear. It will make them look at me more closely and they will make the connection sooner, but I can’t take a chance and stay. I am not safe.
No one is at the shop when I arrive. I don’t bother to go inside. I unlock my bike from the rack out front and head for home.
THREE
I push open the back door and step inside the mudroom. I hang my bike helmet on the hook on the back of the door and slip off my sneakers, heading into the kitchen. The house is still, yet I am not at all startled to see Agent Zeke Chapman sitting on the couch, leafing through a magazine, waiting for me.
‘How’d it go?’ he asks lightly, as though his being here is completely natural.
The last time I saw him, I gave him my laptop and told him to leave. I never wanted to see him again.
‘Maybe you should just tell them to arrest me,’ I say. ‘I don’t know why you haven’t.’
Zeke sighs. He closes the magazine, leans over, and puts it on the table. ‘No one’s going to arrest you, Tina.’ He has still not looked at me.
I roll my eyes. ‘Why not?’
‘You’re innocent, aren’t you?’ I hear a tinge of doubt in his voice, doubt that I actually am innocent. And now he does look at me; his eyes meet mine and he knows.
I am capable of it. And maybe in another time, another place, I would have done it. Or at least thought about it. Conceived a way to do it. But would I have gone through with it? There is no way of knowing.
‘Tony DeMarco has more reason to put a hit on me than the other way around.’ Sixteen years
ago, I stole ten million dollars from bank accounts online, two million of which was Tony DeMarco’s money. Because of that crime, I have been living off the grid all these years. ‘Anyway, I gave you my laptop. I haven’t had one since.’ I am not lying about this, and somehow he senses it. But …
‘This was put in motion before I saw you. Before you gave me your laptop.’
I try not to let him see that his words startle me. This is why he doubts me. Why there is a question in his eyes.
‘So, then, why don’t you arrest me?’ Something changes in his expression, and it dawns on me. ‘You don’t have any way to prove it was me, do you?’
He shakes his head. ‘It’s more complicated than you think.’
I glare at him, and it comes out before I can stop myself: ‘Then why don’t you find Tracker and have him help you? Why don’t you arrest Tracker? Bring him in for questioning? Maybe he is the one who did it. He is just as capable as I am.’
I do not know for sure that no one knows his true identity. That Agent Zeke Chapman is a hacker called Tracker, and he has been hiding online behind that screen name for over twenty years. Tracker was my best friend and he helped me steal that money, but I only found out a month ago who he really is.
‘Tina, is there any way you would consider helping us find out who put the hit out on DeMarco?’
I spent two months trying to get inside Tony DeMarco’s deep web site to find proof of illegal activity so that the FBI could arrest him. I remind Zeke of this and add, ‘You don’t give a rat’s ass about Tony DeMarco, and if he dies, you would not lose sleep over it.’
He grins and holds up his hands. ‘Guilty as charged.’
‘So, then, why do you want to find out who put out the hit?’
He looks visibly uncomfortable, then says something completely unexpected. ‘That laptop at the bike shop? It’s yours.’
I don’t understand.
He sees my confusion. ‘It’s not physically your laptop. But someone hacked into it and uploaded your data into it.’
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