She looked vexed. “Do you know anything about computers?”
“Apparently not as much as you’d like me to know, so just explain in layman terms.”
“There are a couple of other people reading her e-mails.”
“Now, how hard was that to say?”
She ignored his sarcasm. “There are a bunch of computers over there at the hotel, and they’re all on the same network. Think of her e-mail like a ball. Yeah, like a ball. When she gets a message, the ball bounces to other stations. Her assistant gets her messages the same time she does. It was set up that way to save time,” she explained. She squinted at him and asked, “Are you getting any of this?”
He wasn’t going to let her irritate him. “You said that there were a couple of people reading her e-mails. Her assistant is one. Who’s the other ball breaker?” he asked with a straight face.
“The ball bounces, Buchanan. It doesn’t break. And it’s someone else in-house.”
“Can you track it to a specific computer?”
“I already did. I don’t remember the computer ID, but it’s in one of her brothers’ offices. I can’t remember which one. It’s all in my notes, which I sent to Wincott. Ask him.”
“Send me a copy of your report.” She was walking away when he stopped her again. “Regan might not know someone else is reading her mail? Is that possible?”
She shrugged. “She might not know.”
Alec turned the corner and spotted Regan through the glass in the door. She was sitting at a computer with the sketch artist at her side. She must have sensed that he was watching her because she suddenly turned and looked at him. And then she smiled. And he smiled back.
Tony tapped her on her arm to get her attention again. Regan reluctantly turned to the screen. Tony was a hard taskmaster. He was an older man who looked like a comedian she’d seen perform at a comedy club a couple of months ago. For the first five minutes or so, she kept expecting him to tell her a joke. Tony didn’t have much of a sense of humor, though. After he shook her hand, he announced that he was a perfectionist and told her that they would work together for as long as necessary to achieve a perfect likeness of the man who had chased her in the park.
It was a surprisingly difficult undertaking. Until she sat down with Tony, she thought she had a good picture of the man in her mind, but that wasn’t the case. Several times she had to close her eyes and try to visualize him again. Being exact about the shape of his nose, his eyes, and his chin was extremely challenging.
When they were finished, she believed the sketch was a good likeness, but it wasn’t perfect by any means. And when Tony removed the glasses and the beard, the man’s appearance completely changed. She didn’t have a clue if that was accurate or not.
Alec was waiting for her outside the sketch artist’s workroom. She handed him the printout and said, “Tony thinks the hair and the glasses and the beard could all be props.” She handed him the second printout of Tony’s drawing. “This is what he might really look like.”
“Does he look familiar?”
She shook her head. “He’s very… ordinary, isn’t he?”
He nodded. “So this might be the…” He started to say bastard and then substituted, “…crazy we’re looking for. He’s nondescript and will blend in with a crowd.”
“Maybe not,” she said. “He was big, as big as you, and just as muscular. His size alone might make him stand out. I don’t know.” She took a breath and then said, “If he’s the man who stole my phone, and if he’s the man who killed Detective Sweeney, and…”
She was too disheartened to go on. “I think Detectives Wincott and Bradshaw are finished questioning me, so I’ll head back to my office. If you or the other detectives need to speak to me, just call or stop by.”
Alec stepped in front of her. “Now, I know you’re smarter than that, and we have been over this, but I’m gonna pretend you still don’t understand. I’ve been assigned to you, and that means that everywhere you go, I go.”
She folded her arms and frowned. The day was proving to be long and arduous. “And as I explained, if I feel I need a bodyguard, I’ll hire one.”
His smile was distracting, and when he stepped closer to her, forcing her to tilt her head back to look into his eyes, she actually felt a rush of goose bumps.
“Are we going to get into an argument?” he asked.
“I believe we are.”
“You can’t win.”
“Why? Because you’ve got a gun?”
He didn’t say a word. He just nodded.
“Because you’re bigger?”
He nodded again.
“Stronger?”
He smiled.
She rolled her eyes. “You’ll notice I didn’t say smarter.” He did laugh then. “Detective-”
It was as far as he would let her get. “Neither one of us can leave just yet.”
“Why not?” she asked, temporarily sidetracked from the bodyguard issue.
“Your brother and your attorney are downstairs in Lewis’s office with Wincott and Bradshaw. I came up here to get you. They’re all waiting to talk to you.”
“Which brother?” she asked, trying not to let him see how irritated she was.
“I don’t know. Does it matter?”
“Yes. I hope it’s not Aiden,” she said. She didn’t tell Alec what she was thinking, but she did hope that Spencer was back in town and was waiting downstairs. He was much easier to deal with.
She shook her head as she attempted to go around him. “I guess we should go downstairs then.”
He maneuvered in front of her again and leaned against the wall. “What’s going on with you?”
He acted as though they were old friends and he knew her so well he could tell when she was out of sync.
She shifted from one foot to the other as she said, “If I hadn’t made that stupid list…”
“You didn’t kill anyone, did you?”
“No, but…”
“You simply took part in an exercise.”
“I made a murder list, for heaven’s sake.”
“Along with a whole lot of other people,” he pointed out. “You just didn’t get the opportunity to toss your list into the fire.” He stepped aside to let her go ahead of him. “I can’t wait to meet this Dr. Shields. He sounds like a snake charmer.”
“Not so charming. Just a snake. I wish I had never heard of him,” she answered over her shoulder.
“So what’s wrong with Aiden?”
The questions jarred her. “Nothing’s wrong with him. He’s a wonderful brother.”
Alec wasn’t buying it. “Yeah?”
“He’s just a little… uptight. That’s all.”
Alec didn’t have to ask which of the two strangers in Lewis’s office was Regan’s brother. The family resemblance was obvious. Though Regan was only five five or five six and her brother was over six feet, they shared the same coloring and patrician features. Aiden was impeccably dressed in a well-cut, dark suit, which Alec assumed had a fancy designer label inside. His own brother Theo had a suit just like it. Calvin Klein, Alec thought. Or maybe Armani.
The well-fed man sitting in a chair facing Lewis’s desk was also wearing an expensive suit. The man was short, round as an egg, and his face was as wrinkled as an unironed cotton shirt. Alec assumed he was the attorney.
Detectives Wincott and Bradshaw stood by the windows, watching. They both looked bored senseless.
Regan’s brother happened to glance up, spotted her coming toward him, and for a fleeting second, Alec saw relief in his eyes. No matter how many flaws the man might have, it was apparent he loved his sister.
