g personal files…
“Yeah, well, you keep saying that, but…” Eve whirled around, stared at the monitor. “Computer, stop. List any and all reference to Roarke under Skinner, Douglas, any rank.”
Working…first listed reference in Skinner, Captain Douglas, case file C-439014, to Roarke, Patrick a/k/a O’Hara, Sean, a/k/a MacNeil, Thomas, date stamped March, twelve, twenty-thirty-six. Subject Roarke suspect in illegal weapons running, illegal entry into United States, grand theft auto and conspiracy to murder of police officers. Subject believed to have fled Atlanta area, and subsequently the country. Last known residence, Dublin, Ireland. Case file complete, investigative data available. Do you wish full case file?
“Yes. In hard copy.”
Working…
Eve sat down again, slowly as the computer hummed. 2036, she thought. Twenty-three years ago. Roarke would have been what, twelve, thirteen?
It wasn’t Roarke that was at the root of Skinner’s obsession.
It was Roarke’s father.
At his own unit, Roarke ran through layers of Skinner’s financials. Among the most clear-cut motives for murder were greed, revenge, jealousy, sex, fear of disgrace, and profit. So he’d follow the money first.
There was a possibility, he’d decided, that Skinner had invested in one of his companies—or a competitor’s. Perhaps he’d lost a substantial amount of money. Men had hated men for less.
And financially Skinner had taken a beating during his run for Congress. It had left him nearly broke as well as humiliated.
“Roarke.”
“Hmm.” He held up a finger to hold Eve off as she came into the room. “Communications,” he said. “I have an interest in the Atlanta media sources, and they were very unkind to Skinner during his congressional attempt. This would have weighed heavily against his chances of winning. Media Network Link is mine outright, and they were downright vicious. Accurate, but vicious. Added to that, he’s invested fairly heavily in Corday Electronics, based in Atlanta. My own company has eroded their profits and customer base steadily for the last four years. I really should finish them off with a takeover,” he added as an afterthought.
“Roarke.”
“Yes?” He reached around absently to take her hand as he continued to scroll data.
“It goes deeper than politics and stock options. Twenty-three years ago illegal arms dealers set up a base in Atlanta, and Skinner headed up the special unit formed to take them down. They had a weasel on the inside, and solid information. But when they moved in, it was a trap. Weasels turn both ways, and we all know it.”
She took a deep breath, hoping she was telling it the way it should be told. Love twisted her up as often, maybe more often, than it smoothed things out for her.
“Thirteen cops were killed,” she continued, “six more wounded. They were outgunned, but despite it, Skinner broke the cartel’s back. The cartel lost twenty-two men, mostly soldiers. And he bagged two of the top line that night. That led to two more arrests in the next twelve months. But he lost one. He was never able to get his hands on one.”
“Darling, I might’ve been precocious, but at twelve I’d yet to run arms, unless you’re counting a few hand-helds or homemade boomers sold in alleyways. And I hadn’t ventured beyond Dublin City. As for weaseling, that’s something I’ve never stooped to.”
“No.” She kept staring at his face. “Not you.”
And watched his eyes change, darken and chill, as it fell into place for him. “Well, then,” he said, very softly. “Son of a bitch.”
5
As a boy, Roarke had been the favored recipient of his father’s fists and boots. He’d usually seen them coming, and had avoided them when possible, lived with them when it wasn’t.
To his knowledge, this was the first time the old man had sucker punched him from the grave.
Still, he sat calmly enough, reading the hard copy of the reports Eve had brought him. He was a long way from the skinny, battered boy who had run the Dublin alleyways. Though he didn’t care much for having to remind himself of it now.
“This double cross went down a couple of months before my father ended up in the gutter with a knife in his throat. Apparently someone beat Skinner to him. He has that particular unsolved murder noted in his file here. Perhaps he arranged it.”
“I don’t think so.” She wasn’t quite sure how to approach Roarke on the subject of his father and his boyhood. He tended to walk away from his past, whereas she—well, she tended to walk into the wall of her own past no matter how often, how deliberately, she changed directions.
“Why do you say that? Look, Eve, it isn’t the same for me as it is for you. You needn’t be careful. He doesn’t haunt me. Tell me why if my father slipped through Skinner’s fingers in Atlanta, Skinner wouldn’t arrange to have his throat slit in Dublin City.”
“First, he was a cop, not an assassin. There’s no record in the file that he’d located his target in Dublin. There’s correspondence with Interpol, with local Irish authorities. He was working on extradition procedures should his target show up on Irish soil, and would likely have gotten the paperwork and the warrant. That’s what he’d have wanted,” she continued, and rose to prowl the room. “He’d want the bastard back on his own turf, back where it went down and his men were killed. He’d want that face-to-face. He didn’t get it.”
She turned back. “If he’d gotten it, he could’ve closed the book, moved on. And he wouldn’t be compelled to go after you. You’re what’s left of the single biggest personal and professional failure of his life. He lost his men, and the person responsible for their loss got away from him.”