She nodded. Tears gathered in her eyes, and she blinked them away.
“Okay, let’s assume he is innocent. If he didn’t send the apples—”
“Then someone else did,” Olivia finished his sentence.
“Who knew you were going to Patmos?” J.L. asked.
“My family. You.”
He affected a shocked look. “I’m innocent, I swear. I’ve been a good boy my entire life.”
She scoffed. “I’m detecting a little deception.”
“Shit. I knew I shouldn’t have robbed that bank.”
She grinned. J.L., bless him, always had a way of cheering her up.
“And I shouldn’t have kicked Mickey Mouse in the balls at Disney World.”
She sat back. “You’re telling the truth now.”
“Damn, you’re good.”
“Why did you kick Mickey?”
J.L. shrugged. “I was only three years old. Imagine the horror of meeting a smiling rodent that’s bigger than you. Besides, I think he wanted my ice cream.”
She laughed.
“Who else knew where you were going?” J.L. asked.
“A few people around here.” Her smile faded, and she exchanged a worried look with him.
J.L. glanced over his shoulder, then lowered his voice. “What did Barker tell you?”
“He agreed that Otis could have an accomplice, but he ordered me to stay out of it. He told Harrison to look into it.” She rose to her feet. “I’ll see if he’s done.”
They walked over to Harrison’s work area. In most ways, Frank Harrison appeared completely normal: average height, average weight, brown hair, hazel eyes. Olivia tended to agree with J.L’s assessment. Harrison acted like a jerk so he would stand out from the crowd.
“Have you got a moment, Harrison?” she asked.
He slanted an annoyed look her direction, then went back to studying his monitor. “I’m busy. In case you didn’t know, the Morehouse case is still open.”
Olivia nodded. Tyson Morehouse was a postal worker suspected of embezzlement. He claimed to know nothing about the missing money, but Olivia had interviewed him the day before and knew better.
“He was lying,” she said. “It was in my report.”
Harrison snorted. “Like we needed your input. We already figured the guy’s guilty. Saunders is trailing him while I trace all his bank accounts.” He glanced at Olivia. “Why don’t you save us some time and use your weird-assed powers to locate the missing money?”
“I’m not a psychic, Harrison.”
“Oh. Too bad.” He went back to studying the monitor. “I thought all that paranormal crap was the same.”
Olivia sensed anger about to boil over from J.L., so she gave him a warning look.
He gritted his teeth. “Look, Harrison, we were wondering if you’d checked on the Otis Crump situation.”
“Another waste of my time,” Harrison muttered as he scribbled some notes. “I went to Leavenworth last Friday and talked to the warden. He had a guard check the log-in book. The only visitors Crump has had in the last eight months is me and you, Sotiris.”
“And his mail?” she asked.
“It’s all checked, coming in and going out. Nothing about apples.” Harrison glanced at her, and she could feel his growing irritation. “You’ve got the wrong guy. Someone else is messing with you.”
She frowned. Apples would have significance only to Otis. Or someone else who knew all the details about his case. Maybe an admirer? Some sick person who had studied Otis and wanted to harass the criminal’s enemies out of a twisted sense of loyalty? “I need a list of everyone who’s communicated with him.”
A spurt of anger rolled off Harrison, and he glared at her. “Forget it, Sotiris. The case is over.”
“It’s not over as long as Otis keeps sending me apples.”
“So you’re getting some fruit,” Harrison growled. “So what? If you can’t take the heat, get out of the fucking kitchen.”
“Hey,” J.L. protested. “Don’t talk to her like that.”
“It’s none of your business, Jail,” Harrison replied, using his nickname for J.L.
“Hold it, you two.” Olivia raised her hands. She returned Harrison’s glare. “I’m not calling the case closed, because you didn’t do a thorough job. Since you can’t be bothered, I’ll do it myself.”
Harrison made a sound of disgust. “You’re freaking obsessed with the guy. You two deserve each other.”
J.L. muttered something rather nasty-sounding in Chinese, but Olivia hushed him with a slight shake of her head. She focused on Harrison. “How many times have you seen Crump?”
Harrison turned back to his monitor. “Just a few times. I hate seeing that asshole.”
“When did you see him last?”
“I don’t remember.”
She stiffened.
“Now buzz off and let me get back to work,” Harrison grated through clenched teeth.
Olivia opened her mouth, but J.L. grabbed her arm and hauled her away.
“Come on, Sotiris, you heard the man,” J.L. said loudly as he dragged her across the room. “Let him work.”
“I wasn’t done,” she whispered. “He—”
“Shh.” J.L. shot her a warning look and whispered back, “We need to activate the cone of silence.”
“We don’t have a cone of silence.”
“We’ll improvise.” He glanced around the open work area. “Go to Yasmine’s office. She’s out today. I’ll meet you in five minutes.”
“Fine.” Olivia headed right, while J.L. veered left toward the hallway.
She slipped inside Yasmine’s office and turned on the light. The supply closet was attached, so she could always claim she was getting paper clips or staples if anyone asked what she was doing there.
She paced across the office, her heart racing as the severity of her new suspicions hit home. Why would Harrison lie about meeting Otis? What was he hiding? It seemed too far-fetched, too awful to imagine a special agent helping a criminal to harass her. But there was no mistaking the truth. Harrison had lied. And he’d tried to convince her that Otis wasn’t the one responsible for sending her apples. She knew that wasn’t true.
She continued to pace, her thoughts growing increasingly alarmed. She spotted the sweater she’d give Yasmine, neatly folded on a shelf. Thank God Yasmine had never told anyone about her meltdown in the restroom. She wondered where the office manager was, and stopped by her desk to check her calendar. A doctor’s appointment.
The door opened, and J.L. strode inside with a bag of chips from the hallway vending machine. He locked the door. “Okay, let’s talk.”
“Harrison was lying,” she whispered.
“I know. Whenever you hear a lie, you get all stiff and prickly looking.”
She stiffened. “I do?”
“Yeah, just like that.” He opened the chips and the smell of nacho cheese filled the room. “So we’re thinking the same thing? Harrison’s the one sending you apples?”
She winced. “It’s a terrible accusation to make. We can’t assume he’s guilty just because we don’t like him.”
“Okay, emotions aside, let’s look at the facts.” J.L. removed a chip from the bag. “He lied to you. He knew where you were vacationing. He’s had opportunity—that’s contact with Otis. And he has motivation.” He popped the chip into his mouth.
“What motivation? I know he doesn’t like me—”
“It could be more. You’re the one who took Otis’s latest confessions. They might be trying to make you look unstable so no one will believe you.” J.L. offered her a chip.
She shook her head and paced across the room. “Otis was already convicted before he met me. I don’t think making me look crazy will help his appeal.”
J.L. bit into another chip. “What would help his appeal?”
“He would have to appear innocent.” She halted in mid-step. “He could swear that an accomplice did the murders.”
J.L. winced. “And you’ve been insisting that he has an accomplice.”
“Because of the apples, yes. But if he can convince everyone there was an accomplice during the murders…” Olivia groaned. “He’s playing me. The bastard’s using me.”
“It looks that way.” J.L. stuffed another chip into this mouth. “We need to be careful about this.”
“We need proof.” Olivia pressed a hand to her stomach. Just the idea that a federal agent could ally himself with a serial killer—it was a nauseating thought.
“I’ll check on Harrison,” J.L. offered. “Don’t worry. I’ll be discreet.”
Olivia nodded. “I’ll step up my investigation on Robby.” She would contact MacKay S&I. If Robby MacKay was secretly sending the apples, she’d uncover it. She’d prove his innocence.
And then she’d be free to love him.
CHAPTER 13
Robby didn’t know, either. Usually, Roman took his son, but for some reason he was unavailable tonight. Connor, too. Shanna had called Robby to the waiting room of her dental office at Romatech and informed him that Tino needed help getting to school. Then she’d hurried off to an examination room, leaving him alone with Tino.
It had to be a conspiracy of some sort. Robby smiled to himself when he pictured Olivia calling him paranoid.
Constantine puffed out his wee chest. “I could teleport myself.”
“’Tis a long way to the school.” Robby wasn’t sure of its exact location since that was a heavily guarded secret, but he knew it had to be several hundred miles from Romatech. “’Twould be verra dangerous if ye got lost on the way.”