She winced. 'I've been debating whether to warn you that he might turn up in your office. I couldn't decide if it would help to know in advance or if you'd rather be surprised. Plausible deniability and all that. Normally I'm not indecisive, but we're talking about the director of the FBI.' She could feel herself digging a deeper hole for herself. 'All in all, I think it's best I didn't warn you. You have nothing to hide.'
'Sophie? What are you talking about?'
'Never mind. I was lost in my work...' She shut her laptop and focused on her conversation with her brother. 'I can hang up, and you can call back and I'll start over.'
'Forget it. I'm not worried about Director March. I'm worried about you, Sophie. You're there alone.'
She immediately thought of Scoop but reminded herself she'd only known him a short time. Mentioning him certainly wouldn't reassure her brother. 'You don't have to worry about me, Damian.'
'You and Taryn worried me even before you were born. The day Mom announced she was having twins, I knew I was screwed.'
Sophie smiled. 'We had a happy childhood.'
'Right.
'I'm not involved in any of that.'
'The cops you're hanging out with are, and you found a murdered police officer yesterday.'
'I don't know that he was murdered. Do you?'
'Not officially.'
She stood up and looked out at the brick courtyard, inviting and romantic in the midday autumn sun. She'd planned on lunch outside among her mums. 'What else did Wendell Sharpe tell you?'
'Nothing you don't already know. Sophie...' Her brother hesitated, which was unusual for him. 'Last September in Ireland?'
She couldn't go through it. Not again, not so soon. 'Unusually dry and mild.'
'Damn it, I'm trying to help--'
'I know you are, Damian,' she said, her head clear now. She could see him in some FBI office, with his dark auburn hair, his good looks, his gun strapped to his side. He loved his work as much as she and Taryn loved theirs. 'Maybe it's just as well you don't know all the details.'
'You're my sister. I want to know.' He sounded worried again, less combative. 'I have some of the details. I can get a flight up there the minute you say so. If you have any information on where Percy Carlisle is, tell me or tell the police. Then back off. I don't like how this thing feels, Sophie. If we were talking about a major archaeological excavation, I'd listen to you.'
Sophie sat at the table, in Scoop's chair from yesterday, when he'd patiently listened to her story. 'The internal affairs detective who was hurt in the bomb blast has been on my heels. We ran into each other in Ireland.'
Damian was silent a moment. 'Cyrus Wisdom. Scoop.'
'Do you know him?'
'Of him. He's top-notch. Just remember, Sophie. Cops tell you only what they want you to know, and they can lie. You can't lie to them, but that doesn't mean they can't lie to you.'
'Do you know Scoop is lying to me, Damian?'
'That was a general statement. If I were you, I'd be very careful trusting anyone right now except Taryn, Mom, Dad and me.'
She thanked him for calling--for his advice and concern--but he was back to being Damian and just grunted and disconnected. It was all Sophie could do not to throw her iPhone against the fireplace, not because of her brother but her situation. She'd felt safe when she'd headed to the Beara Peninsula to check out Keira's ruin, figuring if Jay Augustine was responsible for both their ordeals, at least he was in jail and no longer a danger. But what if Cliff Rafferty's death had nothing to do with either her or Keira, and the Celtic symbols in his apartment were just a diversion--a way to obfuscate and mislead?
To what end?
Sophie shut down her laptop and headed out to the courtyard. She smiled at her pots of mums, as if they were a symbol of happiness and normalcy. She could easily see Scoop taking up gardening. He was physical, results-oriented--he'd appreciate hoeing, weeding, harvesting.
She gave herself a mental shake and remembered her brother's cautionary words. Scoop was a detective recovering from a bomb exploding within yards of him, and yesterday morning she'd led him to the probable bomb-maker--who was dead.
What if the bomb-making materials had been planted on Cliff Rafferty's coffee table?
Whatever the case, did she really think Scoop had
Feeling considerably less jet-lagged than she had yesterday, Sophie was too restless for lunch and continued through the archway and up the steps to the street. Damian was right. She was accustomed to being contained and decisive in her world as an archaeologist, but she'd been off balance ever since she'd learned more details about Keira Sullivan's experience on the Beara Peninsula.
Avoiding Charles Street and the Whitcomb Hotel, she wound her way down to busy Beacon Street and crossed to the Boston Public Garden, a Victorian botanical oasis in the heart of the city. She immediately relaxed amid its enormous shade trees and well-kept lawns and flower beds. She noticed leaves just beginning to change color, tinted gold, orange and red, and walked past the shallow man-made pond where the foot-pedaled Swan Boats had entertained tourists and locals alike for more than a century. She could have spent the afternoon on a bench, or brought her laptop with her and worked on turning her dissertation into a book, as Colm Dermott was encouraging her to do.
Instead she crossed Boylston Street and continued toward Jay and Charlotte Augustine's showroom in the South End.
Scoop materialized on the next corner and fell in next to her. Sophie angled a look at him. 'How long have you been following me?'
'Since the Swan Boats.'
'I'm not good at spotting a tail. I guess I'd have to learn if I decide to be an FBI agent, huh?' Her breath caught at his grim intensity. 'What's wrong?'
He stayed close to her as they crossed the street. 'Jay Augustine died this morning in his jail cell, probably of a massive stroke.'
'Then whatever secrets he had died with him. Had he been sick?'
'Not that anyone knew. He was one evil son of a bitch. I wouldn't be surprised if he willed his own death-- made himself have a stroke so he could be with the devil he admired so much.'
A crowd of office workers and shoppers swarmed past them. 'Could he have suspected something was wrong with him and refused to tell anyone?'
'It doesn't matter now. He's done.'
'Did Cliff Rafferty ever meet him, talk to him?'
Scoop shook his head. 'Not that we know of. What's on your mind, Sophie?'
She nodded vaguely down the street. 'I'm on my way to the Augustine showroom in the South End. I wonder if anyone's there to let me in.'
'All right.' Scoop was cool, hard to read. 'We'll walk over there together. Someone will be there today.'
Because of Augustine's death, she realized.
Scoop matched her pace. 'Hell of a coincidence after yesterday. Maybe Cliff had a word with the devil and they summoned old Jay home.'
They came to a narrow building with an upscale health club on the first floor. Scoop opened a glass door to the small entry. The Augustine showroom--or former showroom, Sophie thought, since it was now closed--was on the third floor. They took a cramped elevator that barely fit the two of them. She was intensely aware of the brush of his arm against hers, the shape of his chest, his thick thighs.
Scoop smiled at her as if reading her mind. 'Tight quarters.'
The elevator clanked to a stop and opened into a reception area. Frank Acosta was there with a uniformed