The List
Title: The List
Author: MMW
Disclaimer: See parts 1-5
Feedback: mmwert@yahoo.com
Part 26
Ezra cracked an eye open, glaring at the
offending object. How dare it make such an odious noise at… his brow furrowed.
That couldn’t possibly be right. 6:30 A. M.? Surely there had been some sort of
hideous mistake. Reaching out a leaden
limb, Ezra attempted to drop his hand upon the object silencing it.
On the third try he actually managed to
silence the noise.
Rolling onto his back, Ezra tried to recall
why he would be attempting to arise at such an unholy hour. Travis, he thought.
Yes. He and Vin were to meet Travis in his office at 7:30 sharp. For appearance’s sake they would need to be
prompt. A part of him hoped that the others had figured out what was going on,
but his more practical mind reared its ugly head and warned him against the
dangers of hope.
Dragging his resistant body from its prone
position, Ezra swung his legs over the side of his bed and rested, elbows on
knees, for several seconds trying to wrap his mind around what he needed to do
for his morning routine.
Finally standing, he shuffled off in the
general direction of the bathroom. It seemed as good a place to start as any.
Fifty minutes later, he pulled his Jag into
the parking garage of the ATF building. Driving to the area he usually parked,
he noted Vin’s battered Jeep resting in its normal spot. He also noted the
Sharpshooter holding a contented looking Cuervo. Releasing a sigh, he could see
the tension in his friend and felt his own shoulders tense in response.
Though his first desire was to restart the
car and drive out of the garage, out of Denver and forget any of this had ever
happened, Ezra resisted his urge to flee. His determination to see this whole
nightmare through was strengthened by the forlorn look in his brother’s eyes.
He had promised Vin that he wouldn’t leave him. Ezra Standish didn’t promise
many things, well, not promises that mattered anyway, but he would be damned if
he would fail his brother in this.
Stepping out of the car, he made his way over
to the patiently waiting Texan. Ezra reached out and scratched behind the ears
of the purring cat. Smiling slightly, he said, “Would we were all so easily
contented, my four-footed friend.” Cuervo rewarded Ezra with a knowing look and
a quick flick of his sandpaper-like tongue.
Shifting his attention away from the cat, he looked into the shadowed
eyes of his friend. “How are you doing today, Mr. Tanner?” he asked.
Vin offered a half-hearted smile. “Back’s
better,” he offered. “Rest is worse.”
Ezra nodded knowingly. “Shall we?”
Seeing a nod of agreement, Ezra walked beside Vin as they headed for the
elevator. Ezra smiled at the their positions. He walked beside Vin, an equal, a
partner, a brother, not behind as a subordinate, or ahead as if he were better.
There had been very few people in Ezra’s life he would have considered walking
beside into Hell and back, only six as a matter of fact, and while he might
have lost five of them, he knew that the sixth would always be there for him.
Reaching out a hand, he patted Vin’s shoulder as he hit the up arrow for the
elevator.
Though he held his mask of indifference
firmly in place, Ezra could feel his increased pulse rate as they approached
Travis’ office. His stomach clenched with a mixture of dread and hope. His fight
or flight instinct seemed to be in overdrive, encouraging him to flee this
scene. He stole a glance over at Vin. Noting the set jaw and firm step, he also
saw the same mixture of emotions in the man next to him. Vin, however, didn’t
seem about to flee. Drawing strength from the younger man’s determined step,
Ezra lifted his chin, determined to face his nightmare, eased by the knowledge
he wouldn’t be facing it alone.
Stopping at the outer office, the duo was
asked to take seats until Travis was read for them. Sitting perfectly still, the two waited. The Assistant would
shoot them the occasional glance, wondering at their placid faces and perfect
stillness, after all, she had heard the tirade on Friday. Normally men who
received such treatment from Orin Travis showed fear, but then, these two
worked with Chris Larabee and if there was anyone in the world almost as scary
as Orin Travis in a bad mood, it was Chris Larabee.
After about five minutes, the two men were
told Travis was ready to see them. Standing, they made their way into the
office, being careful to close the door behind them. Taking the seats Travis
offered, they turned their hopeful eyes upon the man.
Travis watched the two men enter his office.
He could see the same haunted look in their faces that had been there Friday
along with exhaustion. Indicating for them to take seats, he offered them
coffee. Seeing two nods of agreement, he walked over to the coffeemaker he kept
in his office and poured two cups.
“So, what’d they say?” came a soft drawl from
the seats.
Travis smiled and turned, a cup of coffee in
each hand. Walking over to the two men, he handed each a cup of coffee. He noted the impatient, anxious look in the
revealing blue eyes and sighed. Taking his seat, he settled down to explain
what had happened at his weekend meeting.
“The other agencies have started their own
investigations as I said Friday, but they aren’t as far as we are with most of
it. I have a list of others in the Denver area who will be working on this,” Travis
explained.
“Sounds like our own damn list,” Vin muttered
under his breath.
Travis shot him a sharp look and smiled. “Yes
it does,” he agreed. “But we’re facing a well-organized and powerful group. We
are only at the most basic level. You’ve both seen the organizational chart on
this. You know what we’re up against.”
Seeing Vin and Ezra both shift in their seats, Travis raised an eyebrow,
curious. “What?” he demanded.
Ezra saw the look Vin shot him, asking him to
explain. “Well, sir,” Ezra began, “that’s not necessarily true anymore. It
would appear that Mr. Tanner and myself have made far greater inroads into the
organization than could be expected. In fact, one might say we’ve gone straight
to the top.”
“Fellini?” Travis asked, his disbelief
evident in his voice. Seeing the nod of agreement from Tanner, Travis closed
his mouth. “We’ll get to that in a moment. I need to tell you more of what
happened. Because we were contacted, I was put in operational control of the
entire situation. I’ll be tracking the information you retrieve and updating my
counterparts and the other required people. When the break finally comes, each
agency will take responsibility for their people. The public figures involved
will be tied to one agency or another. We won’t be letting on to the media or
anyone else that this is all one syndicate. It’s going to be sold to the public
as a government-wide crackdown on corruption. Each trial will be held
separately, even when entire teams like Team 10 are taken in. We’re hoping that
will result in too many individual trial for any one person to tied
together.”
“But can we tell them?” Vin persisted, his
need for his family evident in his strained question.
Travis leaned back in his chair and folded
his hands. “Yes,” he said and saw the immediate relief flow through the two
young men before him. He saw them ease back in their chairs, a large portion of
their tension leaving them. It had been far harder on the men and most likely
on Team Seven than he thought. Travis felt a vague twinge of guilt assail him
at having misjudged his team, but it was too late to regret the decision now.
Now he just had to hope the others were as good as Standish and Tanner at
hiding the truth. “However,” he
continued, regaining their attention, “you two are still operating more or less
on your own undercover. They will continue their jobs and you will continue to
draw away from them. They will be available as backup, to help with
surveillance and in any other way necessary, but you two will be reporting
directly to me on this. Understood.” He received two nods of understanding. The
corner of Travis’ mouth twitched, he could probably ask them for their
first-born children, a kidney and their right arm right now and they’d agree,
he mused.
Leaning forward and opening his desk drawer,
he pulled out the guns and badges he had collected the previous Friday. Handing
them back to their respective owners, he said, “Both of you are now back on
full status. Now tell me what happened this weekend.”
Part 27
Four men sat impatiently at their desks, eyes
scanning from the clock to the elevators. The clock read 7:45 and there was no
sign of Chris.
“Try his cell again,” JD encouraged.
“I’ve tried every five minutes for the past
30 and there’s still no answer!” Buck shouted. Then, seeing the stricken look
on JD’s face, he apologized. “I’m sorry, JD. We’re all just on edge and anxious
to get up that meeting with Ez, Vin and Travis.”
JD smiled, acknowledging the truth of the
statement. “I know Buck,” he offered, “I just don’t have that much patience
left.”
Josiah opened his mouth to say something as
the elevator doors opened revealing the ominous form of Chris Larabee. “Thank
God,” he breathed. Standing to follow the others to the elevator their leader
was holding.
Crowding into the elevator, the five men rode
it up to the floor Travis’ office was on.
Stepping off the elevator, they strode down
the hall, unaware of the imposing image they presented. Led by the man in
black, the set faces of the other four men did little to encourage friendly
greetings. In fact, most people took one look at the approaching wall of danger
and quickly got out of the way, feeling a stab of pity for whoever had caused
such looks to appear on the faces of the five men and a wave of relief that it
wasn’t them.
Entering the outer office, Larabee and the
others ignored the protests of Travis’s Administrative Assistant. When she
actually stood in front of the door, Larabee picked her up and bodily handed
her to Josiah who carefully placed the woman to the side.
Their way now clear, Chris opened the door
and stepped in, followed closely by the rest of the team in time to hear Travis
command, “Now tell me what happened this weekend.”
“That’s what we want to know,” Larabee hissed
at his men. He heard the door click shut and looked at the three faces that had
turned at the intrusion. “What the Hell is going on? We found the List. We know
about Fellini and the others. We know that you know Travis and we suspect that
you’re trying to get Vin and Ezra to make it look believable that we would kick
them off the team or transfer them to Team 10. What I, what we, want to know is
why Hell you didn’t tell us?”
The three co-conspirators scanned the five
faces before them, seeing the resolve, seeing the truth and knowledge there.
Vin and Ezra exchanged a look before turning to Travis for an explanation.
Travis sighed. “Let’s go someplace that has
enough chairs for everyone,” he suggested. “Once we’ve settled there, I’ll tell
you everything I know. Then Vin and Ezra can update us about the latest
developments in the case.” Seeing nods of agreement, he stood and the eight men
started toward the elevators. The five imposing figures still walked together,
followed by a contrite looking Orin Travis and the unreadable pair of Vin
Tanner and Ezra Standish, though if one were to give an opinion, the two
bringing up the rear looked almost smug and pleased with something.
As they entered the elevator, Vin leaned over
and whispered something to JD who nodded his understanding. Ezra shot Vin a
curious glance. Vin just nodded that things would be ok.
When they arrived back on the floor which
housed Team Seven, JD pushed his way out first, quickly making his way to his
desk where he threw open a drawer and started rummaging through his random
collection of electronic equipment before surfacing with something.
He just managed to squeeze past the others as
they entered the conference room and began arranging themselves around the table.
Scanning the room he caught sight of Vin motioning everyone to be quiet and
wait. Finishing his scan, JD released
the breath he didn’t know he’d been holding and said, “Far as I can tell,
there’s nothing here.”
“Thanks, JD,” Vin said a grateful smile
gracing his face.
Chris turned a puzzled glare at Vin. “Bugs?”
he asked.
Vin’s face was serious. “It’s a possibility
Chris. We can’t be too careful about this. There are too many lives at stake,”
he said. Including yours, Cowboy, he sent silently. He saw Chris’ eyebrows rise in surprised
shock.
Travis cleared his throat, settling at the
foot of the conference table, Tanner on one side of him, Standish on the other
and five less than friendly faces focusing their hostile gazes at him. Damn,
he thought, hope I live through this.
Clearing his throat, he began. “It sounds like you know most of what’s
going on. I’ll fill you in on the details you’re missing and then these two can
update us on the latest developments.” Seeing nods of agreement around the table,
he continued. “About two or three weeks ago, while undercover, a young woman
approached Agent Tanner at dinner and gave him a diskette. Tanner and Standish
were reviewing the file when I walked into Team Seven’s area. As you know from
having read the file for yourselves, the information in it is explosive.
Evaluating the options, I decided on a course of action. My first request was
that Tanner and Standish try to confirm the information’s accuracy without
arousing suspicion. They managed to do so. Once informed that they had
corroborated the evidence, I decided upon a plan of action.”
Scanning the faces, he took a deep breath. He
knew what he was about to say would make him one of Team Seven’s least favorite
people, but that couldn’t be helped. “Since Team 10 is mostly on Fellini’s
payroll, I felt it necessary to get Vin and Ezra onto Team 10 as an in. I asked them to begin creating problems on
Team 7 so that people wouldn’t question when I decided to swap the two of them
with the two members of Rollins team not on the take.” Looking into each set of
eyes now glaring hostilely at him, he said, “All of your reactions needed to be
genuine. They needed to be believable.” Nothing. Silence. Suppressing a sigh,
he continued. “Friday morning I received a call from Agent Tanner informing me
that he and Agent Standish were finding their current course of action too
difficult to maintain. He made some very persuasive arguments in favor of
alerting you as to what was happening.”
All eyes turned to see Vin who seemed focused
on Travis. Both he and Ezra wore enigmatic smiles, causing the rest of Team
Seven to wonder exactly what the sharpshooter had said to persuade the AD.
Clearing his throat to regain the attention
he had lost, Travis related, “I had already set a meeting with members of the
other agencies involved, members I could trust, for the weekend, so I didn’t
want to give away too much before then, especially because I didn’t want to
jeopardize lives or the investigation. So, we staged the discussion over their
behavior in the Saloon the previous night. Though we had to make it look good,
we tried to make it seem rehearsed enough that it would raise your suspicions,
Chris. I have to say, we were worried when you left that you wouldn’t pick up
on that given your current state of anger.”
Chris smiled and shot a grateful look
at Buck. “I didn’t until Buck got me calmed down,” he admitted.
“Good,” Travis stated. “Anyway, I flew
out Friday and met with my counterparts and those in the know. We discussed the
file, the proof and the investigations underway. Given the extent of the corruption, we felt the public would lose
any and all trust in us if they knew the true extent of the problem. As such,
we have decided to work together as much as possible, but feed this to the
media as unrelated instances of corruption within various government agencies.
Each agency will try their cases separately as unrelated to the others.
Hopefully that will keep the media from putting things together and realizing
the extent of the organization.”
Taking another deep breath, he
continued. “This is a very delicate operation. We will offer the other agencies
as much help as possible. The danger is if those involved get suspicious. That
is why I was reluctant to let anyone else in on this. I know you are the best we have, but Vin and Ezra’s lives now
depend on how believable you can make the fights, how realistic you make the
rifts look. If Rollins or Corbin or
anyone else suspects that the discord is anything but real…” He let the statement
hang, seeing that everyone at the table understood the seriousness of the
situation. “After a lot of discussion, I was told to allow you all in on it.
You will be backup to Tanner and Standish. You are to take your queues from
them and from me. It’s the only way,” he finished.
He scanned the unhappy group of men and
saw Larabee’s reluctant nod of agreement.
“Good,” Travis replied. “Now we need to
be updated on what happened this weekend.
Part 28
Six sets of curious eyes turned toward Vin
and Ezra. The two men looked at each other, holding a silent communication in
which it was agreed Vin would begin, he being the one least likely to be shot
by Larabee.
“Well,” he began with great trepidation, “we
sorta spent the weekend with Frederick Fellini.”
“You what!” came the enraged cry from around
the table.
At the initial sound, Vin and Ezra both
flinched in their chairs. As the voices of their brothers fought for
domination, the duo quickly scanned the table and noted Larabee sitting quietly
at the end of the table, eyes burning. At the other end of the table sat Orin
Travis, every bit as quiet and terrifying as their leader. Looking at each
other, their eyes got larger in worry. This was worse than they could have
imagined.
“Gentlemen,” came the commanding tone of Orin
Travis. His authority carried over the table without the need for raising his
voice. As the men quieted and sat, all now glaring at the two sitting by
Travis, he continued. “I’m sure Agents Standish and Tanner have a very good
explanation as to why they have attempted contact with Fellini at this stage.”
Giving both agents a hard look, he queried, “Gentlemen?”
Vin shifted uncomfortably in his seat. Ezra
adjusted his cuffs. Neither wanted to answer the question.
“Ezra,” came a low growl from the irate blond
at the head of the conference table.
Clearing his throat nervously, Ezra commenced
the tale. “Yes. Well. As you know, Mr. Tanner and myself were under orders from
Mr. Travis to maintain the ruse that we found our current relationship with you
less than idyllic and desired to precipitate a disunity among our assemblage.
Finding within ourselves the inability to perform such a task without
elucidating you upon the full scope of the situation, we conspired to enact a
subterfuge, which would keep us out of communication for at least the day.
Having decided upon our course of action…”
“What the Hell are you talkin’ about Ez?”
Buck interrupted. Turning to the others, he could see confusion writ on JD’s
face as well. “Vin, what the Hell did he just say?” The ladies’ man asked the
sharpshooter.
Not meeting the eyes of his friends, he
stared at the table and translated, “We couldn’t hurt ya deliberate like and
decided to go somewheres all y’all couldn’t reach us.”
“And that was to Fellini!” shouted Nathan. He
was angry. These men had done some stupid things in their day, but this had to
come damn close to topping them all.
Vin’s eyes flashed as his glare bore into
Nathan. “No! We found a dead zone for our phones and went to the rodeo.”
Silence reigned at the table for a good five
seconds before JD could no longer muffle his chortle of laughter. Soon Buck and
the others joined in, even Chris smiled.
“I fail to comprehend what is so amusing,
gentlemen,” Ezra stated, somewhat affronted.
“Ezra at a rodeo?” JD choked out before
trailing off into another stream of laughter.
Ezra looked at Vin. Vin just shrugged and
waited for everyone to calm down. When order once more began to reign at the table,
he continued. “On our way back from lunch, someone set off some firecrackers
that spooked one of the horses. The rider was about to fall…”
“And you charged in to save the day,” Nathan
muttered, shaking his head at the predictable and dangerous antics.
Vin and Ezra exchanged a look, were they
really that predictable? Seeing Ezra’s slight shrug, Vin took a breath and
continued. “Turns out the woman we helped was the one what gave me the
diskette. Then Fellini came chargin’ in and thanked us.”
Silence blanketed the room. Six sets of eyes
remained fixed on the duo. “And…” Josiah prompted.
Vin looked at Ezra to continue. With a sigh,
Ezra opened his mouth. “In simple English,” Chris growled.
Releasing another sigh, Ezra continued. “Mr.
Fellini was tremendously grateful for our assistance in ensuring his niece’s
well-being and insisted we be his guests for dinner as a mode of thanks.” Chris
raised an eyebrow. Ezra had been plain, but he hadn’t given much information.
Looking over at Vin, Larabee’s eyes demanded more detail.
Vin shrugged and picked up the thread, “So we
had dinner, chatted, spent the night and left.” Feeling their eyes boring into him, Vin knew they wanted more
detail, he just wasn’t ready to give it to them. Everyone needed to calm down
first. His back was hurting, they’d done nothing but yell at he and Ezra and he
just wasn’t in the mood to be nice about things.
Larabee leaned back in his chair. Slowly unclenching his hands, he rested them
on the arms of his seat. He hated being
out of control. He hated when his men took risks. He hated when he didn’t know
what was going on and he especially hated that he had suffered all of these
indignities over the past four days due to the two Agents at the end of the
table. The weekend he spent worrying about them, only to find them well had
flipped his emotions once more. Then to hear them so blithely discuss having
spent the weekend with the target of their investigation… “Tell me everything,”
Larabee spat through gritted teeth, rage rolling off of him and washing in
waves down to the targets of his dissatisfaction.
“Do you wish to summarize, Mr. Tanner, or
shall I?” Ezra asked, hoping the sharpshooter would accept the task.
Looking into Ezra’s eyes, Vin read Ezra’s desire
to hide. Feeling the same way, he decided to let Ezra off the hook. Taking a
deep breath, he began, “Fellini had us stay with him for the rest of the rodeo. He wanted to take us ta
his house for dinner. Seemed ta take a real shine ta both Ez and me. We decided to play him as straight as
possible, especially with the inroads we’ve been making with Team 10.” He
noticed the others sit up straight at this revelation.
“Inroads with Team 10?” Josiah asked,
curious.
Vin looked at Ezra with pleading eyes. Closing
his own, Ezra summarized, “Most of Team 10 is on Fellini’s payroll, as you know
if you read the list in full. Friday night, we met with those members of the
team who have sold their souls to the foul creature and did our best to find
our way into their good graces. The end result is that Mr. Tanner attended a
baseball game yesterday with one member of the aforementioned team while I
attended the opening with both Fellini and Jeff Corbin.” Having summarized their involvement with
Team 10, Ezra sank back in his chair hoping it would hide him.
Vin nodded his agreement with Ezra’s
statement. “So we told him we were agents with the ATF, didn’t tell him what we
did specifically, but let him know we were on Team 7. He’s heard of us and
didn’t seem ta like ya a whole lot, Cowboy,” Vin reported, looking at Chris.
“We took a tour of his house, had dinner and talked about stuff – just general
stuff until he asked us a weird question.” At this point Vin fell back, his
eyes lost in the disturbing memory of that question and revelation.
Ezra shifted uncomfortably in his chair,
inadvertently causing six sets of expectant eyes to fall on him. Noticing the
discomfort of the close scrutiny, he cleared his throat. “He inquired as to our
thoughts on the problem that most plagued our world today. He then delivered
his opinion – overpopulation.” He saw puzzled looks on most of the faces around
him, before he continued. “It would appear that he feels two-thirds of the
world’s population must be removed in some manner if the human race is to
continue to evolve. His method of providing that means is to supply guns to
those he deems undesirable and allow them to remove themselves from the
population.”
JD shot a look around the table, he felt
sick. He could see the same feeling being expressed in every man’s eyes. “Kill
off two thirds of the people? How sick is he?” JD inquired. “And he just came
out and told you?”
Vin picked up the narrative. “Yep, came right
out and told us. Seemed real anxious ta get us ta agree with him. It’s late so
we went to bed then. Next mornin’ I got up early and headed off to see the
horses. Ran into Anna there, the lady what gave me the diskette. Seems her
uncle is losin’ his mind. ‘Cordin’ tell her he’d never’ve told us nothin’ three
months ago, but he’s losin’ his grip.”
Buck snorted and muttered, “Must be losin’
his grip on reality if he likes the two of you.” Silence fell around the table
as all eyes turned to Buck “What?” he asked innocently. “They opened the door,
I just walked through,” he defended.
A smile twitched at the corner of Larabee’s
mouth. Catching sight of it, Nathan allowed a smile to form on his lips as
well. Soon the other men were smiling and chuckling slightly at Buck’s humor.
“Shut up, Buck” Vin and Ezra ordered at the
same time.
Vin focused on the table, collecting his
thoughts as he waited for things to settle down again. Finally quiet settled
upon the men. Looking up, Vin allowed his eyes to drill into each man at the
table. “We can’t let it go on much more. He completely loses it, no tellin’
what kind o’ trouble we’ll be havin’.”
He waited until all the men at the table nodded in agreement before
continuing. “Anna is under constant surveillance which is why we don’t have the
files yet. She and her pa are bein’ held against their will and will need ta be
gotten outta there.” Vin shifted uncomfortably at the next part. He didn’t want
to let on how much his back hurt him and especially not since he knew Chris
would be carrying guilt about it.
“Well?” Travis encouraged. “What else happened?
You said something about him not liking Mr. Larabee.”
Vin looked at Chris, winced and looked away.
Shifting in his chair yet again, he offered, “Thursday I landed real hard on m’
back. It got all bruised up and some swellin’ and stuff. Went ta th’ doctor and
got some pills for it, but it got ta botherin’ me. Anna figured it out an’ set
it up so’s I could get a massage from Fellini’s Massage Therapist. Turns out
she’s an old friend o’ mine, reliable and all. Might be an in for us. Anyway,
Fellini found out, asked how it happened and I couldn’t see no benefit from
lyin’ ta him, only harm, so I told him how it happened.” Vin’s voice had been getting softer and
softer. All the men were leaning forward to hear him by this point.
“You told him I threw you through a table,”
Chris choked out softly, ashamed of what he’d done to his best friend.
Vin kept his eyes locked on the table and
nodded. “Fellini’s real mad about it. Wanted ta do somethin’ to ya, but I
talked him outta it. He just don’t like ya a real lot, Chris.”
Silence enveloped the table for several
seconds before Josiah cleared his throat. “That could be useful,” he said
thoughtfully. He felt all eyes turn to
him. “I’m not sure how it could be used just now, and I know it’s dangerous for
Chris, but it might prove beneficial in the long run.” The men at the
conference table pondered this bit of information.
“Did Fellini give any indication he would
recruit you?” Travis asked.
“Mr. Fellini went out of his way several
times to express his great admiration for Mr. Tanner and myself, take us into
his confidence and treat us as if we were equals in his endeavors. I fear our
‘saving’ of his niece has given more of an entrance than months of undercover
work would have been able to garner. Now we just need to be cautious about how
we proceed,” Ezra informed them.
Travis nodded, then leaning forward he asked,
“So, what’s your plan?”
Part 29
Ezra looked around at his teammates and
worked to suppress his smile. He and Vin had finally been able to tell the rest
of the true reason for their behavior. The meeting hadn’t gone entirely
smoothly, especially when they had revealed not only the fact that he and Vin
had met Fellini, but also the fact that they had spent the weekend with him.
At one point he wasn’t sure his
well-intentioned and protective friends would allow them out of the room alive.
Nathan had looked about ready to throttle them. Buck’s face had achieved an
interesting shade of red. JD, it appeared, had developed something of a glare
of his own. Josiah seemed displeased, but at least open to listening to them. Travis
appeared ready to spit nails. Chris… Chris had been angry and upset, but those
emotions were tempered by an underlying guilt.
Ezra leaned back in his chair. Guilt. It
could be a very destructive force, especially in someone like Chris Larabee, a
private man who had difficulty admitting he was wrong and even more trouble
forgiving himself for mistakes. Vin had forgiven him, had told Chris it was all
right. Yet Ezra had seen the tiny flame of guilt flare in the Team Leader’s
eyes each time Vin moved stiffly or shifted in his seat.
Ezra allowed his eyes to rest on the
Sharpshooter across from him. All of Vin’s focus appeared to be on the report
he was typing, but Ezra knew differently. It was a very rare occasion, indeed,
when anything slipped past the notice of the young man, yet just now Ezra could
tell Vin’s attention was equally divided between the report on his screen and
easing the pain in his back. Releasing a quiet sigh, Ezra had to admit to
himself that his partner was much better now than he had been the past few
days, but it was still painful to watch him.
Soon, the end of the day arrived and the men on the team stood to
leave. Vin lagged behind slightly, straightening his desk before painfully
making his way toward the elevator bank. Members of the other teams were also
filtering toward the elevators when a harsh voice called out, “Tanner! Get your
butt back here.”
Freezing in their tracks, all faces turned to
look at the sharpshooter, eyes filled with pity for his predicament. Larabee
sounded angry and that caused several people to scurry for escape. Vin noted
that Craig and Davey from Team 10 were watching the proceedings with interest
and looks of sympathy. Allowing anger to flood his visage, Vin released a soft
string of curses as he turned. “What do ya want, Larabee. It’s quittin’ time,”
he demanded, staring at his boss defiantly.
Those who were unfortunate enough to miss the
first set of elevators tried not to watch the confrontation but found their
gazes drawn to the conflict by the same fascinated horror the grips drivers as
they pass a fatal accident. They found themselves completely incapable of not
looking.
Noting the vein throbbing in Larabee’s
forehead, Buck felt a desire to stay and protect Vin. He had managed to pull
Vin to the side and apologize for his comments of Thursday night at the Saloon.
Vin had just smiled and said, “forget it”. Buck was grateful for the
forgiveness, but a part of him still felt bad for attacking his friend causing
him to be overprotective. Taking a deep breath, he turned his attention to the
elevator bank knowing he couldn’t interfere.
Larabee drilled
his gaze into the young man before him. “You will stay here until I say you can
leave,” he ground out, his voice a low, deadly growl.
Tanner snorted in disbelief and turned back
toward the elevators. “Quittin’ time’s, quittin’ time,” he declared sagely.
Larabee stormed up to the young man, grabbing
him by the shoulder and spinning him around. “I don’t know what’s gotten into
to you and I don’t care. You were supposed to have those reports to me before
the end of the day,” he hissed.
The brief demand from Larabee gave Vin the
opportunity to recover his breath. The sudden movement created by Larabee when
spinning Vin around had aggravated the younger man’s back. “I gave you your
reports an hour ago,” Vin spat back, anger radiating from ever fiber of his
being, his very posture projecting danger.
Larabee’s eyes widened in disbelief. “You
call those reports?” he demanded, his voice increasing in volume. “Hell, I know
three year olds who write better than that.” Taking a step closer, he looked
down, directly into the eyes of the Texan. “You will stay here and re-write
those reports correctly, or…” he let the threat hang, allowing a slow, cruel
smile to curve his lips.
Fists clenched and face reddened with his
rage and embarrassment, Vin offered one more heated, hate filled glare at his
Team Leader before stalking back toward his desk. Passing Chris he muttered,
just loud enough to carry, “Fuckin’ Cowboy.”
Chris froze. “What did you call me?” he
asked, the deadly edge once more returning to his voice.
“Ya heard me,” Vin spat back. “Or have ya
gone deaf in yer old age?”
Stepping up to the younger man, Chris
ordered, “My office. Now!” And then waited while the sharpshooter eyed him up
and down before slowly turning and sauntering into Larabee’s office. Feeling
all eyes upon him, he turned to the curious group. Allowing the full force of
his anger to flow through his glare, he watched them shift nervously and
scamper for the elevators as the doors opened. Chris waited until the last of
the people were on the elevators headed down before returning to his office.
Stepping in, he closed the door behind him.
Concern for his friend flooded Larabee as he
witnessed Vin lying on his back on the floor, knees raised, a look of pain
evident on his face. “God, Vin,” he said, “I’m so sorry, I didn’t mean to hurt
you more.”
“’S OK, Cowboy,” Vin offered. “Made it look
more b’lievable.” Then looking up into the concerned, and guilt-ridden green
eyes he suppressed a sigh, offering instead a cocky grin. “Think we ‘bout gave
Buck a coronary, though.” He said, waiting for the grin to appear on Larabee’s
face. Eventually the corners of Chris’s mouth began to twitch. Seeing that, Vin
wiggled his eyebrows, earning a laugh from his best friend.
Chris felt some of his guilt ebb as Vin’s dry
wit took effect. Looking into the expressive blue eyes of his friend, Chris
read no recrimination for his actions. Allowing a larger portion of his guilt
to slip away he asked, “Is there anything I can do?”
Vin watched as Chris began to forgive
himself, almost releasing a sigh of relief when he saw most of the guilt leave
his friend. “Left m’ pills on m’ desk,” Vin said, wincing as a muscle in his
back spasmed.
Chris nodded and left to get the pills and
some water. Returning, he saw Vin in the same position, only this time he had
his arms covering his eyes. Chris, noting that Vin’s color was several shades
too pale, quickly gave his friend the pills he needed. “Anything else I can do,
Vin?” he asked, concerned and once more fighting the tendrils of guilt.
Vin looked up into the worried green eyes.
“Nope,” he answered shortly. Another spasm raced up his back muscles. “Maybe
call Barb?” he suggested through gritted teeth. “Her card’s in my coat pocket.”
Larabee nodded and reached down to retrieve
the card. Walking over to his desk, he
quickly placed the call and asked for Barb to come as quickly as possible.
Finishing the call, he turned to look at Vin. “She’ll be here in about 20
minutes,” he informed the man on the floor.
Vin nodded to let Chris know he’d heard.
Taking several deep breaths to help ease the pain, he asked, “Think we were
convincing enough?”
Larabee looked down at the young man and
couldn’t suppress the chuckle that bubbled up. “Hell, Vin,” he replied, “I
believed it and I knew it was rehearsed. I don’t think I’ve ever seen JD go
pale quite so quickly.”
Vin chuckled at the memory. “Guess we did
pretty good, huh? Fooled our friends and ourselves,” he observed. A faint trace
of guilt entered the sky blue eyes as he thought of his words to Chris from
Thursday. Shifting slightly, he focused on his knees and said, “I’m real sorry
about what I said Thursday.” Looking into the green eyes, Vin allowed his
honesty and sincerity to flow out from his. “I don’t see ya like that, Chris.
Yer a good man and I don’t judge ya fer nothin’.”
Chris smiled down at Vin. “You don’t have
nothin’ to be sorry for, Cowboy. Now that I know what it was about, I don’t have
any problem with it. I forgive you,” he offered.
“And I forgive you for throwin’ me through
the table. Chris,” he said, trying to catch the man’s eye. “Ez and I set you up
for that. We knew what we were doin’ and did it deliberately. I’m sorry we used
you… I’m sorry I used you like that,” he offered, his voice softening. Seeing the last trace of guilt leave his
friend as understanding bloomed, Vin held up his hand which was immediately
taken by Larabee in their familiar grip.
A small spark of devilment glowed in
Larabee’s eyes. “Manipulated me, did you?” he asked, looking down at the
younger man, a less than comforting smile on his lips.
“Aw, Hell,” came Vin’s worried reply.
Part 30
Tom Rollins slowly
replaced the receiver in its cradle before settling back in his chair. The call
had been unexpected and it shook him. He knew Fellini was aware of his interest
in Standish and Tanner and bringing them onto Team 10, but Rollins had not
expected Fellini’s personal involvement.
Tom wasn’t suspicious
of Fellini’s instructions to get them away from Larabee as soon as possible; he
was surprised. He had only heard of the
Tanner/Larabee run in Tuesday morning, but Fellini knew every detail. The man
also knew about the dressing down Standish received when he showed up five
minutes late for a briefing on Tuesday.
Everyone whispered that Larabee was losing it. Even the rest of Team
Seven appeared to be walking on eggshells.
Fellini wanted
Larabee removed. That could get interesting, Rollins thought to himself.
Simms and Corbin had
given the green light to proceed cautiously with the two potential recruits,
but Fellini was adamant that they be brought in without hesitation. What the
Hell had happened? Maybe it was time to have lunch with Tanner and Standish and
get some answers. The way Larabee was railing at them about their expense
reports right now, they probably needed the break. Rollins shook his head,
wincing as Larabee’s voice carried into Team 10’s area. For a man known for his
menacing silence, Larabee sure could be heard when needed.
Typing out a quick
email, Rollins invited Tanner and Standish to lunch. He would spend the time
finding out why Fellini felt they were so important and feel them out about
working on Team 10. If they agreed, he
would speak with Travis this afternoon and see if he could get the men
transferred by Monday.
Of course, he still
needed to speak to Connors and Daniels about leaving the team, let them know it
was nothing about their skills, but those two goody-two-shoes wouldn’t raise a
fuss, especially if Rollins made it sound like they were doing everyone a
favor. Yes, that would be the way he’d approach it with them.
As for Larabee? A
frown creased Tom’s brow. Fellini had wanted him removed and Tom had been
working with the man long enough to know removed meant dead. While other people
had been “removed” over the years, Larabee would be a problem. Hopefully by
removing Standish and Tanner from the man’s control, Fellini would forget about
him. If not… Life could get a whole lot more complicated very quickly.
A knock at his door
had Rollin’s head snapping around. “What?” he asked, seeing Sarah Daniels, Team
10’s current undercover operative in the doorframe.
“Just wondering if
there’s anything you can do about Larabee. He’s already scared one of my
contacts off the phone with his ranting. I’ll never get the information we need
if he doesn’t stop,” she explained.
Releasing a sigh,
Tom stood. “I’ll see what I can do,” he replied. Then letting a small smile
show added, “Maybe I’ll get some of the other Team Leaders to go with me. He
can’t shoot us all, right?” He saw Sarah smile in response to his joke. Yep,
she’d be gone soon if he had any say. Once she and Paul Connors were gone, Team
10 could make a real difference – especially to their bank accounts.
Walking out into the
hallway, he stopped by Team 4’s area and saw several other Team Leaders
gathered there. Approaching the group, he nodded his greeting and asked, “Trying
to decide who’s going to walk into the lion’s den?”
The others turned
and smiled. Adam Grant, leader of Team 2 replied, “Yep. This can’t go on. If
they can’t work it out, some changes need to be made.”
“We were going to go
to Orin with this, see if maybe he could shift some personnel, but all of our
undercover agents are, well, undercover at the moment,” Tina Jakes, Leader of
Team 6 said.
Feeling all eyes
upon him, Tom worked to suppress a smile. This was working out better than he
thought. Now it will look like it wasn’t even his idea. Nodding, he said, “Let
me guess, because we’re just starting a case you were thinking I’d be happy to
swap for Tanner and Standish.” He watched several sheepish looks while he
scanned the faces. Releasing a sigh he said, “All right. But only on a
temporary basis.” He saw the relief flood the faces of the others. Then
allowing a mischievous smile to curve his mouth, he said, “Of course, since I’m
taking those troublemakers, you can deal with Larabee right now.” He laughed as
the faces before him winced and cringed. He couldn’t have planned it more
perfectly if he’d tried. Now he just
needed to talk to Daniels and Connors and let them know what was going on. He’d
see Tanner and Standish at lunch.
Turning to leave, he
called back over his shoulder, “Oh, and one of you better tell Travis what’s
going on.” He laughed as he heard the others groan.
Stepping back into
Team 10’s area, he called, “Daniels! Connors! My office now.”
The sharpshooter and
the undercover agent exchanged glances. They had been suspicious of their
teammates for some time, but none of them had ever done anything to give them
cause to report them. Both agents were aware that they didn’t fit in well with
Rollin’s idea of Team, though they weren’t sure what exactly that entailed.
Still, he had been a good and fair Team Leader, making sure they always had
what they needed to do their jobs and progress in their careers. Something in
his voice, though, bespoke of changes for the two agents.
Rollins waited for
them to enter his office. “Close the door and have a seat,” he requested of his
agents. Seeing their nervous looks, he smiled and let his eyes soften, trying
to put them at ease. “I just met with the other Team leaders. They’ve gone to
deal with Larabee right now.” Looking each agent in the eye, he continued,
“Right now, we are the only other team either not already in the middle of a
case or wrapping one up. The other leaders have requested that I arrange a swap
– the two of you go to Team Seven, Standish and Tanner come here.”
Seeing the concerned
looks on their faces, he continued, “I’m not going to force either of you to do
this. Everyone knows that team isn’t the easiest to work with and I’m not
exactly looking forward to having those two troublemakers on my team either.
But the fact remains, if something isn’t done, the problems we’ve had over the
past few days are going to continue and will get worse. I’ll give you some time
to think about it and let me know.”
“Thank you,” Connors
said. “We’ll let you know soon.” Then, standing, he and Daniels left the room
to discuss the pros and cons of switching to Team Seven.
Rollins knew they
would do it. They liked Sanchez and Jackson, were amused by Dunne, Daniels
could handle Wilmington, leaving the only question mark if they would be able
to handle Larabee. Contemplating how he
would approach Standish and Tanner at lunch, Tom was startled by a knock on his
door. He looked up into the face of Adam Grant. “You talk to Travis?” he asked.
Grant smiled.
“Larabee was there when I got there already yelling at Orin about getting those
two, and I quote, “insubordinate morons”, off of his team today. It really was
something to see. Travis just sat there looking at Larabee as if he had grown
another head. When Larabee finally took a breath I stepped in and mentioned we
had a potential solution. Travis should be calling you soon.”
“Thanks, Adam,” Tom
said, smiling at his fellow team leader as his phone began to ring.
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