Page 12 of Hunting Time

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“Yessir,” Keller said. Shaw handed her a card containing only his name and current burner phone number. And he took down her direct line on the back of another.

As she left, someone else entered. As tall as Keller, this woman was blond, hair braided carefully and affixed behind her head. Shetoo had an alluring face. Her build was athletic, and he wouldn’t be surprised if she ran marathons.

Sonja Nilsson, it seemed, was head of Harmon Energy security.

“Mr. Shaw,” she said, also shaking his hand firmly. “Good to meet you.”

He expected an accent and he got one, though it placed her not in Stockholm but within a hundred miles of Birmingham, Alabama.

“Colter,” he said.

Nilsson offered, “Marty told me he was talking to you. I looked you up. Rewards for a living?”

“Like a private eye who doesn’t bill unless he delivers.”

She sat perfectly upright and moved her hands and arms economically. She held a tablet but didn’t fiddle with it. She wore a complex analog watch and no jewelry other than a ring on the index finger of her right hand. It seemed to be a serpent. He couldn’t tell for certain. Shaw made another deduction: she was a veteran. And that she’d seen combat. The eyes—a rare green shade—were completely calm.

Nilsson said, “I’ve gone as far as I can, looking for the thief. Nothing. We need a fresh take.”

Shaw now opened a notebook, 5 by 7 inches. From his jacket he removed his fountain pen, a Delta Titanio Galassia, black with three orange rings toward the nib. He knew some might think in this day and age using an instrument like this was pretentious. But Shaw took lengthy notes during the course of his rewards jobs, and a fine pen like this—it was not inexpensive—was kinder to his hand than ballpoints. It was also simply a pleasure to write with.

As she described what had happened in detail, he jotted notes in his perfect handwriting, the lines horizontal on the unruled paper. This was a skill that had not been taught to him but simply passed down from his father. Both were calligraphers and artists.

When he felt he had enough to get started, he said, “I want to see employees’ RFID log-ins and log-outs. And security tapes.”

Nilsson said, “I’ve already pulled that together.”

They rose and shook hands once again, Shaw nodding away the effusive thanks and hoping a businessman’s hug would not be forthcoming.

9

Sonja Nilsson’s office, curiously, was bigger and contained better furniture than her CEO’s. Good art on the walls too. Landscape photos mostly. He wondered if she’d shot them herself.

They sat on a couch before a long glass coffee table, on which were neat stacks of manila file folders.

Together, they reviewed employee records and the data from digital key entry and exit points, Shaw taking occasional notes. She lifted a seventeen-inch laptop onto the files, booted it up and logged on with both fingerprint and password. On this she called up surveillance tapes of the corridors where the S.I.T. components had been stored. Even though they fast-forwarded the tapes, this took a solid hour.

When they’d finished, Shaw said, “Again.”

It was halfway through the second viewing that Shaw spotted the fly.

He scrubbed back and examined the scene again.

“Look.”

He pointed to a video of the corridor leading to the facility where the S.I.T. components were stored. No one was seen entering orleaving the place between the closing time of 5:30 and the start of business at 8:00 the next morning.

He froze a frame and pointed to the insect on the wall.

“Okay. Got the little critter,” she drawled.

“Now look at the next day.”

He ran that tape to the time he recalled.

The same fly landed in the same place.

“Well, damn.” The latter word was two syllables.


Tags: Jeffery Deaver Thriller