Martin, wearing a sharply cut gray pantsuit, had shoulder-length light brown hair and a no-nonsense style that Bree loved. A former investigator with the Defense Intelligence Agency, Martin was also an entrepreneurial visionary who, after leaving the military and her marriage, had built Bluestone into one of the top private security firms in the country by aggressively recruiting top law enforcement professionals like Bree.
Martin was demanding but generous. What more could you want in a boss?
She ended her phone call as Bree pushed open the door and said, “Hello, Elena. Am I early?”
Martin smiled, stood, and extended her hand. “Bree,” she said. “How good to see you.” The two shook, and Martin gestured for Bree to sit. “I saw there’s been another Family Man killing. Alex must be busy.”
“Up to his eyeballs, as our boys, Ali and Damon, like to say,” Bree said, sitting.
“Any leads?”
“None that I’ve heard,” she said, feeling slightly uncomfortable. “Because he doesn’t share much with me about the case. He can’t.”
“Understood,” Martin said, also sitting down. “The whole thing’s just wrong. On another, happier note, I read your report on the Wallace Industries investigation. Well done.”
“Thank you. It didn’t take me long to figure out who was embezzling from their research fund.”
“Well,
Bree was happily surprised. “Thank you, Elena. I didn’t expect that, but I’m not going to turn it down if you’re offering.”
“Who would? And I’m insisting,” Martin said. She steepled her fingers. “You were the one.”
Raising her eyebrows, Bree said, “The one?”
Martin pointed to the two boxes on the conference table. “The first and only one I thought of when this delicate case came our way. We have a client with very deep pockets who wishes to remain deeply anonymous.”
“Do you know the client?”
“I know the client’s representative but not the client, no.”
“What am I doing?” Bree said, reaching for the boxes. “Where am I going?”
Martin put her hand on Bree’s. “You need to sign a nondisclosure agreement.”
“Isn’t nondisclosure boilerplate in our contracts?”
“Not in this case,” Martin said. “The client’s nondisclosure agreement is punitive.”
“Punitive?”
“If anything leaks, you and I and the firm could be sued for damages.”
Bree frowned at that. “Elena, I’m not saying anything is going to leak, but—”
“Don’t worry,” Martin said. “I’m taking out an insurance policy to cover any damages we might incur from this case.”
“Is the contract worth it?”
“Yes, and you have no idea what it might mean down the road for you, for me, and for Bluestone if we can prove ourselves with this case.” Martin slid three documents across the table to Bree. “Sign if you’re in. If not, no problem, I can find someone less talented to do the job for a smaller piece of the company’s future.”
Bree hesitated for a moment, then smiled as she found a pen in her purse. “Well done yourself, Elena. You got me hook, line, and sinker.”
“Thank you, Bree,” Martin said. “I’d hoped that would work.”
CHAPTER 9
AFTER BREE SIGNED THE NDA, Elena Martin left for another meeting. Bree took the two cardboard boxes into her office and locked the door behind her.
She removed her jacket and got out a pad of paper and her phone in case she wanted to take photographs for later reference. Bree opened the first file and was intrigued to see it held the records of a lawsuit from several years before; the file was stamped DISMISSED and SEALED in red letters.
The case had been brought in Raleigh, North Carolina, by two women and a man she’d never heard of against a defendant whose name was instantly recognizable. It shocked her.
“Frances Duchaine,” she whispered. “
Bree read the first few sentences of the dismissed suit and her free hand traveled to her mouth. By the time she was halfway through the document, she was not only thoroughly engrossed but also angry. When she finished, she was furious and wanted to throw the file away. But then she went back to the start of the complaint and that stamped word dismissed and wondered how much, if anything, she’d read was true.
Bree forced herself to withhold judgment, calm down, and be open-minded. She set that file to one side and chose another from the box.