“So anything new to report?” asked Campbell.
“I met with Alex. I told her about Jenny using her government resources to find out who had raped her.”
“What did she say to that?” Campbell wanted to know.
“It’s not so much what she said as what she did.”
“I’m not following. What did she do?”
Devine explained about her collapsing. “At first I thought she had passed out. But when I went to help her she started screaming at me to leave her alone, to get off her. Then she started punching and kicking.”
“My God, was she having some sort of seizure? Did you make her understand that you were not attacking her?”
“The thing is, I don’t believe she was addressing
“Who then?” asked a clearly confused Campbell.
“I think what I told her prompted her to have some sort of an unconscious memory episode. That’s the only way I can think of to describe it,” said Devine.
“Wait, do you mean your discussing the attack again made her, what, relive it?”
“Yes. I think she was defending herself against her attacker. When she finally came around she had no memory of any of it. I didn’t tell her what she said or did. I’m not a psychiatrist. I didn’t want to mess her up even more.”
“No, you did the right thing. Now, Devine, did she mention a name or give you any clue as to who it might have been?”
“No, nothing like that.”
“And you’re certain that whoever killed Jenny attacked Alex?” asked Campbell.
“Not only am I sure of that, but also, based on something else Alex told me, I’m pretty sure the person who attacked Alex and killed Jenny also murdered Alberta Palmer.”
Campbell blurted out, “How do you figure that?”
“Alex had an episode like she did with me today, with Bertie, two days before she was killed. Only I think Bertie got lucky where I didn’t.”
“You mean Alex
“Or at least gave enough information that allowed Bertie to figure it out.”
“You think she confronted the person?”
“I do. And if I’m right, we saw the person’s homicidal reaction,” noted Devine.
“Two murders tied to Alex’s rape. Which means
“I’ve been a target ever since I stepped foot in this place. Okay, since you brought that up, anything new on the mole? Or the woman from Geneva?”
“Yes and no.” Campbell paused. “I blame myself.”
“What do you mean?” said Devine sharply.
“My admin assistant has vanished.”
“What’s her name and what happened?” asked Devine.
“Dawn Schuman. And we don’t know what happened to her. She didn’t show up for work yesterday. We called and then sent a team to her house. Her car was missing and it seems as though she had packed a bag. We have alerts out on her everywhere but so far nothing.”
“And why do you blame yourself?”
“Because I knew something was off and I did nothing about it. She’d gotten divorced and there was a custody dispute over her kids. And she was struggling financially. She had confided in me some of these personal issues. I should have followed up with our security folks to keep an eye on her but I didn’t.”
“Because her personal issues could have compromised her?”
“Yes, and now with her disappearance, I think she might well have been compromised.”
“And she knew about my movements?” said Devine.
“She arranged your travel while you were overseas, and also your itinerary for Maine.”
“But why run now?” asked Devine.
“They might have asked for something she was unwilling to give. Or she felt guilty, or scared that we would find out once we began our internal security audit. Ironically, her fleeing was what made us look at her.”
“They might have grabbed her and made it look like she left voluntarily.”
“Trust me, Devine, I had thought of that possibility. Should I send you reinforcements?”
“No. That’ll just spook our killer and then the guy goes even deeper underground.”
“Well, be careful.”
“I’m not sure that’s going to get it done, sir,” replied Devine before clicking off.
Chapter 52
Devine could not sleep that night. The rain beating down on the roof, normally a soothing white noise, simply served to pound relentlessly into his head, and also into his thoughts.
A mole in Campbell’s organization had likely helped put a bullseye on his back. There were forces up here who wanted him dead. And he had a murderer that hopefully he was closing in on. And while he had fought battles on two fronts before, it had never been quite like this.
He gave up the attempt at sleep, got dressed, grabbed his gun, and headed out, running to his SUV through the rain and cranking up the heat once he got inside. The trip he was about to take was not all about his insomnia. He needed to follow up on a possible lead that he had failed to do before.
He headed through the darkened streets. He didn’t know if he would again see what he had glimpsed once before, but he had his fingers crossed that he would. It might not be connected to Jenny’s death, but he couldn’t rule it out until he knew a lot more. And it was intriguingly odd; that alone deserved scrutiny.