direction. Like his sister says, he had uncommon intellectual gifts. That would be important to certain people, or agencies.”
“That and the time spent in D.C. make me lean the same way. Plus the fact that the FBI is all over this with unusual interest.” He dusted off his hands. “Okay, let’s make the rounds of the ME, and the office where Roy worked.”
When they came out of the barn an SUV pulled into the front yard and two men in suits got out.
One of them said, “Can I ask what you’re doing here?”
Sean gazed at him. “Right after you tell me who the hell you are.”
The men flashed badges. Quickly.
“Didn’t quite catch the name of the agency on your commission,” said Sean. “Want to try that again, slower?”
The creds didn’t come back out, but the men’s guns did. “We’re federal officers and you need to get off this property right now.”
Sean and Michelle showed their IDs, explained what they were doing there, and Sean’s earlier conversations with the local police force and the county prosecutor.
One of the men shook his head. “I don’t really care. Get out. Now.”
“We’re investigating this case for the defense. We have the right to be here.”
“All the same, you’re going to have to leave.”
“How’d you know we were here?” asked Michelle, as they headed to her truck.
“Excuse me?” said one of the men.
“There’s nobody around here. We didn’t pass one car getting here. How’d you know we were here?”
In response the man opened the door to Michelle’s truck and motioned for her to get in.
Sean and Michelle sped off down the dirt road, billowing dust behind them and into the faces of the two Feds.
“They couldn’t have known we were there, Sean. And those badges looked like the real deal even if I couldn’t see what agency they were actually with. They looked like Feds.”
He nodded. “We’re being tailed. I wonder for how long.”
“I swear there was no one following us when we went to see Kelly Paul. There’s no way I could’ve missed that. There was no cover. Absolutely none.”
“That’s the rub. There’s no cover here, either, and they still showed up.”
Michelle gazed out the window. “Satellite?”
“We’re up against the Feds here. Why not?”
“Buying satellite time is a tough step even for the Bureau.”
Sean considered this. “Those guys weren’t with the FBI. They want you to know who they are. They would’ve shoved their creds right in our faces and kept them there.”
“Damn, what have we got ourselves into?”
Sean didn’t answer her because he had nothing to say.
CHAPTER
29
“HE WAS AN EXCEPTIONAL WORKER. Smart as a whip. No—smarter, actually. It was really something. Almost not human, I’d guess you could say.”
Sean and Michelle were in Leon Russell’s office at the IRS in Charlottesville. Russell was short and wide, with thick white hair. He wore a short-sleeved shirt with a T-shirt underneath and suspenders. His fingers were stained with nicotine, and he twitched a lot, as though the absence of a cigarette in his hand was messing with his mind.
“That’s what we heard too,” said Sean. “What were his duties here?”
“He was the troubleshooter. Anything out of the ordinary that no one else could figure out, we went to Edgar.”
“What sort of person was he?” asked Michelle.
“Kept to himself. We’d sometimes go out for a beer after work. Edgar never joined us. He’d head home to his farm. I think he liked to read.”
“Did you ever go out to the farm?”
“Only once, when I was interviewing him for the job.”
“How’d you come to know about him?”
“Friend of a friend. At his college. I keep contacts everywhere. People with exceptional talent I get a heads- up on. Edgar really stood out. He’d been out of school for a while, doing what I’m not sure. But I called him up and he came in for an interview. Impressed the hell out of me. I had one of those old Rubik’s Cubes on my desk. He picked it up while he was talking to me, and kept messing it up and then solving it over and over, just like that. I’ve never been able to do it once. It was like he could see every combination in his mind. Bet the guy could’ve been a hell of a chess player.”
“I didn’t realize the IRS went all out for that kind of talent,” said Sean. “It’s not like you can compete with the salaries on Wall Street.”
“Edgar had no desire to go there. Don’t get me wrong. He probably could’ve come up with some derivative algorithm that would’ve made him billions. Or designed some software in Silicon Valley that would have made him equally rich.”
“But no interest?”
“He had his farm, his books, his numbers.”
“Numbers?” asked Michelle.
“Yeah. Guy loved numbers, what he could make them do. And he loved complexities. He could take a ton of different sections of the tax code—income, gift, estate, corporate, partnerships, carried interests, capital gains—and visualize how they all worked together. Did it for fun. For
“Pretty unique,” said Michelle.
“Oh, yeah. Made our little office stand out, I can tell you that. Other places wanted to snag him. I mean in the IRS system. They tried, but he was content. He didn’t want to move. Thank God for me. The performance bonuses I got because of that guy, well, let’s just say my retirement will be a lot better because of him.”
“I understand that he went to D.C. a lot,” said Sean. “Is that because he was the only one in the country who understood it all?”
Russell’s amiable expression changed. “Who told you he went to D.C. a lot?”
“Is that not true?”
“Depends on how you define
“How would you define it?” asked Michelle.
“Once a week.”
“Okay, did Roy meet that standard or not?”
“I’d have to check my files.”
“Is the office here that big?”
“It’s bigger than it looks.”
Sean switched gears. “So he was working here when he was arrested?”
Russell leaned back and studied them both, his hands resting on his belly. Over his shoulder was a shelf full of thick white binders with sleep-inducing titles on the spines.
“And you
“That’s right. We were hired by his counsel, Ted Bergin.”
“Who I now understand is dead.”
“That’s right. He was murdered up in Maine near where Roy is being held.”