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“No, you’d just look as if you were trying to be something you’re not,” she replied honestly. “I like the way you look,” she added, smiling.
“You and your niece are unusual,” he said thoughtfully. “You’re very honest.”
“So are you, and I think that’s going to be a real problem when you start pointing fingers at Haralson, because he’s not. That picket mob at Lombard’s was his idea.”
He was suddenly intent, every trace of amusement wiped from his face. “Can you prove that?” he asked.
She shook her head. “He talked to Clayton. All I heard was what Clayton said to him, and my ex-boss wouldn’t admit that in public in a million years. Haralson has him well-trained,” she added bitterly.
“Apparently he has Senator Torrance well-trained, too,” he said. “Because what I’m finding out about Haralson is that he’s been given a more or less free hand to do what he likes. Until the past year or so, he was on the borderline of legality in his methods, but in this campaign he’s crossed the line.”
“What do you think he’s up to?” she asked.
“I don’t know. I’m going to find out.”
“Do you think Senator Torrance has put him up to it,” she persisted.
He scowled. “Torrance has a nasty tongue and he’s probusiness all the way, but he’s as honest a man as I’ve ever heard of. No, he wouldn’t use that sort of underhanded method to win his own election, much less to help Seymour win his.”
She hesitated. “Seymour’s sister Nikki didn’t seem to think so. She didn’t seem surprised at the tactics.”
“She doesn’t know everything that’s going on,” he returned.
Plots. Plots within plots. There was something in this man’s face that was secretive, careful. “Are you really just on vacation?” she asked slowly.
He answered her with a question of his own. “What do you know about Torrance’s marriage to Seymour’s sister?”
She hesitated.
“Derrie,” he said, using her name for the first time, “I understand loyalty. If we’re going to do anybody any good, you’re going to have to trust me.”
“That’s hard.”
“I know.”
His eyes were without guile, without secrets. He didn’t look away or fidget, and she read his body language very well.
“It’s something to do with his marriage to Nikki,” she said finally. “I never knew what, because nobody ever talked about it. All I know is that Nikki doesn’t date or get serious about men since then.” She paused, searching his face. “Don’t hurt Nikki. She’s an independent woman, but she’s so fragile.”
“That won’t be necessary. Haralson is who I’m after.” Dark lights flashed in his eyes and she got a glimpse of what it would be to have him for an enemy. The look made her nervous, even though it was meant for someone else. “He’s up to his neck in this, but what I don’t know is how and why. It has to be more than just making sure Seymour wins the election.”
“Does Senator Torrance know more than you do?”
His dark eyes narrowed. “I’m not sure that he does. The senator doesn’t follow Haralson’s movements too closely. That’s an error in judgment, surely, but I don’t think he’s malicious enough to deliberately discredit someone. Haralson, now, he is.”
“You’re his friend, aren’t you?” she asked.
“I was a casual friend,” he corrected. “I collect old coins. Haralson found out and we traded a time or two. He offered to sell me a piece I’ve been coveting for my collection in return for finding an illegal dumping site for him.” He leaned back again. “I didn’t know what he was up to at the time. When I realized it, it was too late. Now I’m plenty sore and out to settle the score.”
“What can you do?”
“What can we do,” he corrected.
She gaped at him. “Oh, no! I’m not getting mixed up in this,” she said abruptly, standing up.
He got up, too. He was tall, muscular, powerful-looking. “You’re already involved. Your boss stands to lose the election if that double-dealer gets his way. Seymour should stand or fall by his platform and its relevance to the voters, not by dirty tricks.”
She grimaced. “The Seymours are still my friends.”
“That won’t change.”
“Yes, it will. Haralson is helping Clayton. If I go against him, I’ll hurt Clay,” she said, wincing involuntarily.
“Are you in love with him?” he said quietly. “Or is he just a habit you can’t quite break? Of course, love erases all faults, doesn’t it?”
She lifted her eyes and found a sudden stark bitterness in his face. “You aren’t quite as carefree as you pretend, are you?” she asked bluntly.
His thick eyebrows shot up. “My life is none of your business.”
The curt, short remark made her smile. Poor Phoebe, if she got mixed up with this man. “Fair enough.”
He picked up his jacket and shouldered into it. Then he straightened his tie, pausing to loop the rawhide around his hair again.
“Are you going to help me?” he asked.
“What do you want me to do?” she asked with resignation.
“Watch Curt. That’s all. Nothing heavy.”
“For how long?”
“A few days. I’ve only got another week of vacation.”
She didn’t want to do it. It seemed so disloyal to Nikki and Clay. But if Haralson was up to no good, it was just as well to find out the extent of it.
“All right.” She looked up at him curiously. “You aren’t going to get in trouble for doing this, are you?” she asked.
He seemed to withdraw, although he hadn’t moved. He turned away. “I told you, I’m on vacation. If I want to watch people, so what? I’ll be in touch.”
She watched him walk to the door, intrigued by that somber remoteness when he seemed at first acquaintance like a clown.
“You’re a very complex man, Mr. Cortez,” she said quietly.
He opened the door and turned, his dark eyes meeting hers. “I think you ought to know that the rumors are flying about Seymour and Bett Watts. Gossip has it that she’s setting a wedding date.”
Her pain was almost tangible. Her eyes glittered with it, but she smiled nevertheless. “Thank you. I needed that.”
He scowled. “Yes,” he agreed, “you did. Bett is a lady with her eye to the main chance. She’s no goldfish, she’s a barracuda. If you care about Seymour, why don’t you do something about breaking up that relationship?”
“You’re very personal for a man I’ve only just met,” she pointed out.
“You’re the kind of person I feel comfortable with—you and Phoebe,” he said. “A man can’t have too many friends.”
She relaxed her outraged stance and smiled sheepishly. “Well, no one can,” she agreed. “Maybe you’re right. But Bett’s got a lot going for her.”
“So have you,” he said, and smiled.
She smiled back. “Thanks, pal.”
He shrugged. “De nada,” he murmured in Spanish. “Don’t let Morgan know you’re watching him, will you?”
“I’ll be very careful.” She cocked her head. “You’re very intelligent for a spy.”
He smiled amusedly. “Am I? Good night, Derrie.”
“Good night.”
He was a curious man, she thought as she went to pour herself a cup of coffee. He’d shown her some credentials, but Phoebe had said he was FBI, and the identification Derrie had seen simply said Justice Department. What if he was neither? What if he was mixed up with Haralson and trying to get something on Sam Hewett? Or what if he was really after Clayton?
She picked up the telephone and dialed Phoebe.
“Hi, Aunt Derrie! What’s up?” Phoebe asked.
“Cortez was just here,” she said bluntly. “Listen, didn’t you say that he showed you FBI credentials?”
Phoebe brushed back her long hair and felt a faint twinge of jealousy that surprised her. Why had Cortez gone to see Derrie?
“Yes, I did,” she said.
“Tell me what the two of you did.”
“He pushed me down in the long grass and ripped off my blouse…” Phoebe began wickedly.
“Phoebe! This is serious,” she added. “And strictly business, if that’s what’s unsettled you. You know how I feel about Clayton.”
“Yes, I do. I’m sorry. Isn’t it silly to feel possessive about a man you’ve only seen two times in your life? And he’s too old and too different, I know all that,” she added before Derrie could.
Derrie, oddly, didn’t agree with her. “I know he was looking for the waste dumping site. Think hard, dear, when you saw those drums, do you remember seeing a logo on them?”
Phoebe hesitated, trying to force her mind back. “Well, yes, I do,” she said. “It was faint, though. Very faint…”
“That’s all I wanted to know. Thank you.” There was a pause. “Why are you sitting at home?”
“I’m not, really. I’m going out with some of the gang. We have to pick up Dale. He lives next door to the Seymours.”
“I don’t suppose you’d stop by there and tell Nikki to call me?”
“Why can’t you telephone her?”
“Mainly because they’ve changed the unlisted number,” Derrie said, hating to admit it. “I guess Clayton was afraid I might pester him on the phone or something! I can’t get the new number from the operator, you know, and I certainly can’t call Clay and ask for it.”
“I see your point,” Phoebe mused. “Okay. I’ll do it. Uh…Cortez didn’t mention me, did he?” she added offhandedly.
“In fact, he did,” she returned. “He thinks you’re very attractive.”
“Oh.” Phoebe’s heart lifted. She smiled to herself. “Good night, Aunt Derrie.”
There was a smile in the voice that replied, “Good night, my dear.”
Chapter Fourteen
Nikki was deeply worried about the way Clayton was acting. He hadn’t been the same since the party at the Blairs, and he was increasingly preoccupied.
They were back in Charleston the next weekend, and the campaign was escalating. There were new headlines in the paper about the legal battles Kane Lombard was facing with the South Carolina environmental people. He was probably not going to face criminal charges, but his company was in violation of several statues of the Hazardous Waste Management Act, not to mention the Pollution Control Act overseen by the people at the Department of Health and Environmental Control. She couldn’t help feeling sorry for him, and faintly irritated with her brother for making a campaign issue of it.
“Quite a dish Lombard had in tow that night,” Clayton remarked over a small supper that night.
“Yes, wasn’t she?”
He was watching her, waiting for a show of jealousy. “Her name is Christine Walker. She’s a clinical psychologist. Incredible, isn’t it, with a figure and face like that? She could have made a fortune modeling.”
“I didn’t notice.”
“Of course you noticed, Nikki!” he said angrily, slamming down his fork. “You were practically making love on the dance floor, you and Lombard. You’ve got to tell me what’s going on!”
She stared at him coolly. “If you must know, he was injured and washed up on the beach. Chad and I looked after him.”
“Chad Holman?”
“That’s right.”
He studied her. “Chad stayed at the beach house with both of you?”
Her eyes met his levelly. “No.”
“Oh. My God, you didn’t stay there alone with him?”
“He had concussion,” she said stiffly. “I had no choice.”
“Of course you had a choice, damn it! You could have put him in the hospital and left him there!”
She slammed down her own fork. “No, I couldn’t! I wouldn’t leave a man I hated in that condition.”
“My sister. My sister slept with my worst enemy…!”
“You hold it right there!” She stood up. Her green eyes flashed angrily at him. “I did not, ever, sleep with him. You know it, and you know why!”
He moved away uneasily, eyeing her. “All right,” he said. “I know it. But nobody else would believe it, not with Lombard’s reputation.”
“I don’t care what people think.”
“I have to. Nikki, I’m running for reelection. This isn’t some great cosmopolitan city, it’s Charleston, where reputations and family honor still mean something! If news of that got out, it could ruin me!”
“It’s not going to get out,” she said stiffly.
“No? What if Lombard is faced with a jail sentence for that dumping?”
She gasped. “No. They’ll fine him, but they wouldn’t…!”
“Illegal dumping of toxic waste is a felony. CEOs and presidents of companies have gone to jail for it. Lombard could, too. Faced with years in prison, he’d throw you to the wolves without a second thought. He and his family would use any wedge they had to prevent that!”
“It wouldn’t help him,” she pointed out. “Even if I’d slept in the same bed with him on Seabrook Island, it wouldn’t do him any good to tell it!”
“It would if he could claim that his accident prevented him from finding out the truth about what was going on back in Charleston.”
“Nothing was going on,” she said. “That employee of Lombard International’s who hired Burke’s swore he didn’t know about Burke’s bad environment record. They interviewed him on television, don’t you remember?”
“Nevertheless, he can be charged for that,” Clayton said with an attorney’s knowledge of penalties. He’d studied environmental law. “The fact that he didn’t check out Burke’s is enough to make him liable under the environmental statutes. He’s guilty of negligence, if nothing more criminal. The environmental people are very militant these days, and they should be. Pollution is easy to cause, hard to correct. Prevention is the only way we can insure future supplies of clean water and air.”
“But it’s okay if we wipe out a species of owl to temporarily save loggers’ jobs,” she said deliberately.
“You and Derrie! Damn Derrie!”
“You miss her, do you?” Nikki asked mischievously.
He didn’t want to think about Derrie. He hated his office since she’d left it, he was more alone now than ever. He stuck his hands in his slacks pockets and wandered around the room, his eyes lingering on familiar things, family heirlooms like the Early American furniture and the antique coffee mill and the grandfather clock that had been left behind when their parents died. He touched the clock, noticed that it wasn’t running at proper tempo. He opened the case, picked up the key, and wound it.
“I remember the sound of that clock chiming when I was very small,” Nikki recalled, smiling. “I always thought a little man lived inside.”
“So did I.” He put the key down and closed the case. His fingers lingered on it. “I feel alone sometimes. Do you?”
“Yes.” She joined him, her arms wrapped around her chest. “It’s different when you don’t have parents. It’s hard to talk to people who do.”
“Have you…heard from Derrie?” he asked without looking at her.
She averted her amused eyes. “Not since just after the primary election. I guess she’s getting settled.” She glanced at him. “Mr. Hewett is well-liked,” she said. “Don’t get overconfident, or do anything illegal, will you?”
“I haven’t.” He sounded insulted.
She sighed. “Clay, you’re walking right on the edge. Don’t you know it?”
“I have to win.”
“Why?” she asked bluntly. “Why do you have to win?”
He hesitated. Now that she was putting it in those terms, into words, he wasn’t really sure. The campaign had been important to him, of course, but only in the past two or three months had it become the most important thing in his life. He stared at her.
“Well, because I want to go back to Washington, I suppose,” he began. “I have programs I haven’t been a
ble to implement, unfinished projects to work on…”
“You weren’t like this until John Haralson came down and started working for you.”
“Mosby suggested it. Haralson has always worked well for him.”
“Mosby walks around in a fog,” she said. “He doesn’t want to know how things are done, just that they get done. He’s very naive in some ways, and altogether too trusting.”
“You aren’t still…?”
She laughed gently. “Still grieving for him? Oh, no. I have scars, but I gave up hope long ago. Mosby can’t help it, can he?”
“No.” He looked at his shoes. “He’s never been found out. That’s the most amazing thing of all. He pretends to like women, then he pretends to like men. He’s managed to keep anyone from finding out.”
“How, do you suppose?” she asked quietly. “I mean, how would he keep someone from noticing, in bed…”
“He kept you from noticing, didn’t he? You’re a babe in the woods, sis,” he said without malice. “It’s just as well that you are. How about a movie?”
She shook her head. “I’m tired. Washington wrung me out.”
He dug in his pocket for his keys. “Bett’s still there, on business again.” He hesitated. “I might go and see Derrie.”
“That would be interesting.”
He laughed unamusedly. “Yes. I guess it will.” He started out, then paused and looked back at Nikki. She looked fragile these days. “When you had pneumonia, was it really Chad who looked after you?”
She hesitated.
“You’d better tell me. I see him occasionally.”
“No,” she confessed quietly. “It was Kane. It was so far gone that I could barely remember Morse Code. He knew immediately that it must be me. He came and got me. I don’t remember much except that I came to in an oxygen tent.”
He stared at her, realizing how dangerously ill she must have been. Kane had saved her life. She hadn’t said anything, but she must have bitterly resented the way Clayton had treated Lombard in the press. She owed her life to him.
Clayton felt guilty, and that made him angry. He didn’t want to be beholden to his worst enemy. That reporter from the Lombard tabloid was still in Charleston and snooping around, and Haralson was getting pretty nervous. Too many undercurrents were at work here, he thought.