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  “She’s worse than usual. They have her in a place.” ‘They’ was Dad-speak for Pim Wat’s powerful Thai family.

  “What kind of place?”

  “They’re calling it a spa, but I think it’s the other kind of place.”

  “A psychiatric facility, you mean.” Silence met this. Sophie shut her eyes, rubbing a bruise on her chin she didn’t remember getting. “That’s a good thing, Dad. Maybe they’ll get her on some medications that work.”

  “She tried to kill herself this time. Said no one loved her.”

  “Ridiculous.” Sophie opened her eyes. The gruesome crime scene photos were still there from the Honolulu gang killings, distracting her. She minimized them. “She’s a drama queen.” That American phrase described her mother well.

  “Your Aunt Malee called me. She asked me to let you know.”

  Sophie was silent, sorting through complex feelings about her mother. She’d tried to make Pim Wat smile for most of her childhood, turning herself inside out to be perfect. Sometime in early adolescence, she’d begun to realize making her happy was impossible. Something was broken in her mother, and nothing Sophie did could fix it.

  Sophie shook herself back into the here-and-now, looking down at the tattoos in calligraphic Thai on the insides of her arms to re-orient herself. One arm reminded her, hope and respect. The other, power and truth. On the exterior of one thigh, freedom. On the other, courage. Circling her navel in tiny writing, where no one saw them but herself, were love, joy and bliss.

  “You should be worrying about yourself, Dad. Your high blood pressure. Following through with actually retiring.”

  He sighed. “I know. Co-dependent, and we’ve been divorced ten years. She does that to me.”

  “She does that to everyone. It’s how she survives.”

  “That’s harsh, my dear.”

  “I’m sorry. I can’t do any better than that.”

  “You’re angry at your mother because of the marriage to Assan Ang. I never thought it was a good idea, as you know, but no one knew what he was like.”

  “It happened. It’s not going away.”

  “Well. I have a source that keeps me informed on him, and he’s married again. We tried to warn the young girl’s family.”

  “No!” Sophie stood up in agitation and felt her stomach knot as a surge of rage and horror hit her bloodstream.

  “Yes, I’m sorry to say. His new bride is seventeen. Her family wouldn’t listen. Your mother tried to kill herself after she heard. She took a whole bottle of sleeping pills.”

  “Oh, God.” Sophie tried to calm herself, one hand gently rubbing her bruised sternum. Ginger, sensing her agitation, whined.

  Assan had another bride.

  It was untenable, unbelievable, and had already happened.

  “Pim Wat blames herself for pushing you into that marriage.”

  “Well, she did push me into it. But I’m out of it now.” Sophie felt herself going alternately hot and cold with flashes of memory. “Someone should help that girl.”

  “We’ve done all we can. He’s taken her to Hong Kong.”

  Sophie remembered that palatial downtown apartment all too well.

  “It’s not right.” The realization broke over Sophie that it wasn’t enough to have escaped Assan herself. He was still free, and he was still doing whatever he wanted to whomever he wanted. She wondered how she’d blocked that out of her mind for so long. “What can I do?”

  “I don’t know, dear. But I wanted you to be aware.”

  Sophie blew out a breath. “Upsetting as this is, I’m glad you let me know.”

  “Your mother—she can’t help how she is. She has a sickness of the soul.”

  That was a new way to look at it. “Yes, it is that. Thanks for calling, Dad.”

  Sophie hung up, her mind going back to the apartment in Hong Kong. Acres of marble floor, black lacquered furniture with white leather, stylized Asian art, and a shiny stainless steel kitchen, everything top-of-the-line. All of it concealed the darkness that lived inside. She knew too well the ways Assan could torture and conceal.

  “Enough,” Sophie said aloud. “Enough. He’s taken up enough space in my head.” She looked down, rubbed her tattoos. They reminded her of her truth. Here. Now.

  That poor girl was not her problem. Her family had even been warned. What more could anyone do?

  Sophie refocused on the case files. She ran a few more programs, trying to track the sender of the tip-off email that had come to the FBI. She still couldn’t trace it. She wondered if the tipster was also the inciter of the kidnappers’ turning on each other, though there was no way to be sure at this point. At a dead end with the kidnapping case, she went back to DAVID’s gang murders.

  She studied the crime scene photos and the evidence processed at the scenes.

  Everything pointed to the rival gang leaders meeting at an appointed place and some sort of trigger setting them off against each other. What had happened? Some sort of double cross? And why had they met in the first place?

  It reminded her of what had just happened with her kidnapping case.

  She scanned the photos and spotted a phone on the ground, fallen out of one of the men’s pockets. Maybe there was something on that phone—a photo? A text message? She could verify that the phone had been logged into evidence, but other than a list of phone numbers from the chip that had been uploaded as part of the case file, the phone’s contents remained on the actual device in an evidence locker at the Honolulu Police Department.

  “Foul stench of a three-day corpse,” she muttered in Thai. She had no justification to go poking around the HPD.

  Her eyes were growing heavy. She slid into a silky sleep tee and as she did so, her fingers brushed the tattoos around her navel. She wondered if anyone would ever see them, would ever touch her besides Assan. That phone call had released memories that had no business surfacing. She shook her head to clear him away, but the ache in her soul remained.

  If only her mixed martial arts coach Alika Wolcott would ask her out. She’d had a crush on him for years now. She brushed her teeth and revisited the painful memory of a few nights ago.

  She’d just finished a bout in the ring with a heavyset Tongan girl nicknamed Jezebel, which had ended quickly and badly for the Tongan. Alika had stepped through the ropes, wearing his fight gear: split-fingered gloves, an open padded helmet, Lycra shorts, and nothing more. “Got energy for a couple of rounds with your coach?”

  “Sure.” Sophie’s pulse went into overdrive as she circled him, trying not to fixate on how gorgeous he was. Warm brown eyes, intent on hers. His smile, with a dimple in the wall of his cheek, the way his dark hair waved off his brow, the grace of his movements as he swung a little from side to side, trying to tempt her into some foolish opening move. His skin was like caffe latte with butter in it, gleaming over world-class muscles.

  There was a distracting shine of sweat on Alika’s shoulders as she charged, only to be brought up short by the breathless thud of him tossing her onto the mat. It infuriated her, even more so when he yelled, “Getting sloppy, Soph!”

  She tried to punch him in spite of having the wind knocked out of her, and she’d have had him too if his rubber guard hadn’t protected his mouth. Then they were grappling in earnest, the twin fuels of anger and sexual frustration making Sophie even stronger than she knew she was.

  She took down a man of six foot two, two hundred twenty pounds, and she made him eat the mat. But it felt like an empty victory when he thumped, and she let him up from the facedown reverse arm restraint that settled things. He sat up, dark eyes flared. Took his helmet off, shook his hair back, and glared at her.

  “We’re done here,” he said.

  She knew he meant he was done coaching her. Just like that, she’d graduated.

  Done.

  He’d never acted on the chemistry between them over the years or even acknowledged it, and she was too messed up to act on it either. Now she’d worke
d so hard under Alika that she’d defeated him for the final time. He wasn’t her coach any longer.

  “Done. Okay.” She’d walked out of the ring like it didn’t matter.

  Sophie slipped into the wide, empty bed. No, Alika had never asked her out and now she wasn’t sure he even wanted to be a friend. She pressed a button on the wall and the blackout drapes she needed to sleep swished closed. Ginger, seeing these activities, jumped up on the bed.

  “No, Ginger. Down.” Sophie pointed. Ginger hunkered and flattened herself out like a big, tawny-yellow fur rug. “Down!” Sophie exclaimed, smacking the smooth jade-green coverlet. Ginger looked guilty and slithered off, the picture of reluctance. “You’ll wreck the material,” Sophie told the dog, dimming the lights. “You can lie right here next to me.”

  This was a conversation they had every night. Ginger pressed her cool nose into Sophie’s hand as if agreeing—but Sophie knew she’d wake up to the dog lying across her feet in the morning.

  Chapter Two

  The Ghost rose from behind the Asian-styled black lacquer desk of his seldom-used official office. He walked around to the front, hand extended. “Thanks so much for coming to check out our company, Mr. Hansen.”

  Hansen was a small gray man ill prepared for the humidity of Hawaii in a gabardine suit and shiny black dress shoes. Pearls of sweat adorned his bald pate and the hand he extended the Ghost was damp. “Thank God you have air conditioning in here.”

  “Every comfort for our clients, and for our computers, of course.” The Ghost gestured to a seating arrangement around a low table featuring a vase of ikebana bird-of-paradise. “Why don’t you tell me how we can serve you.”

  “I’m here on behalf of a client. My client prefers to remain anonymous, and has security concerns.”

  “Of course he does. You’ve come to the right place.”

  The interview proceeded well, and ended with the Ghost’s assistant bringing in contracts for Hansen to sign by proxy for his powerful, rich, anonymous employer.

  Under the Ghost’s elegant black silk shirt, his heart thudded with excitement. He kept his body still and breath controlled with the core of inner discipline he’d cultivated through years of martial arts and meditation training.

  This big fish that had just swum into his net had connections in Europe and Asia, and if he were happy with the Ghost’s services, more would come. Ushering Hansen out after another unpleasant handshake, the Ghost returned to his desk and sat down to develop an expansion plan.

  Ginger was draped across Sophie’s feet when she woke, much later than usual without her alarm. Sophie clicked on her rigs and did her morning bathroom business, feeling bruises from yesterday’s rescue op throb at her from various areas. She took a couple of ibuprofen and changed into exercise clothes.

  She sat down at her work area, putting on her headphones. “Call work,” she said aloud, pressing a button at her ear, and the phone feature rang. She pulled up Visual and moments later, she was looking at Waxman in the conference room. Her boss’s silver hair showed comb tracks, but tiredness showed in the pouches under his gray-blue eyes.

  “Good morning, sir. Just checking in. Do you need me to come in today?”

  “No. Internal is still processing your shooting. You have an afternoon psych debrief scheduled with Dr. LaSota.”

  Dread tightened Sophie’s belly. LaSota, one of the FBI’s psychologists, was not known for her bedside manner.

  “Yes, sir. Just wanted to let you know I extracted the data off the phones. The text messages the kidnappers received were sent from the same source.”

  “Did you get a number?”

  “A burner. And no luck tracking that tipoff email either. Did Gundersohn and Yamada come up with anything new?”

  “Yes. They found the lessor of the apartment and are tracking that to a holding company. They may route data later today to your workstation at the office to track the company further if they get stuck. We’re still trying to find out who’s running this supposed kidnapping ring, but until then, rest your injuries. How’s the chest, by the way?”

  “Sore.” She rubbed the bruise she’d spotted in the mirror this morning, lurid against her tawny skin. “But I’m fit for duty whenever you clear me. Send me material to work on at home.”

  “I thought we discussed that.”

  “We did.” Sophie kept her face impassive. She knew what her expression looked like. Assan had taught her that face, and she continued to find it useful. Eyes slightly down, submissive. Brows arched, alert as if waiting for directions. Mouth firm but slightly smiling, as if in a good mood. Oh yes, she had this mask practiced and she could keep it up for as long as she needed to. “I told you then about VPNs. My work station is secure.”

  “Agent Ang, we have policies for reasons and they are bigger than you. When you’re cleared for duty and back at your desk in the office, that’s when you’ll get more data to process.”

  “Yes, sir.” Sophie bit down on her frustration. She had no intention of following restrictions and policies developed by old white men who never got out from behind their desks and were unfamiliar with the new frontiers of tech. This was part of the reason the FBI was losing virtual battles online. “Call me when you’re ready for me to come in.”

  “I will.” Waxman sat back, smoothed a steel blue tie that exactly matched his eyes. Sophie wondered if his wife had picked it out for him. It seemed like the kind of thing a wife would do, the kind of thing she’d have done if Assan had been worthy of it. “I feel bad that the review process of DAVID is taking so long.”

  “Yes, it is.” Sophie kept her face immobile, unreadable. “I’m sorry about the delay as well. What’s the problem?”

  As if it didn’t much matter, when it was everything.

  She had to get through the meeting with Dr. LaSota and stay cleared for duty. She was hiding a lot lately, and planning to keep on hiding it.

  “It’s the consent issue that’s slowing things down the most. What we need to do is to set up blanket consents for DAVID to access other agency and law enforcement databases at will and as needed, and that’s really meeting some resistance. There are many who think DAVID could be a threat in the wrong hands.”

  Sophie’s muscles tightened with frustration. “I’ve developed some really good encryption software. I have every intention of guarding DAVID with the best protection the Bureau can come up with.”

  Waxman sighed, rubbed his chin. A slight rasp to the sound, amplified by the video feed, told Sophie he hadn’t shaved, unusual for such a tidy man. They must have been up late and back in the office early. “Of course. But that’s not the only issue. The bigwigs I’ve heard from are concerned it gives our agency too much power, having a program like DAVID that searches their databases for information for our cases, and not vice versa. So I don’t know what to do next to advocate for use of the program.”

  “DAVID works. It will catch criminals that would never be detected otherwise,” Sophie felt her cheeks heating. “Isn’t the greater good worth fighting for? It’s been almost a year. DAVID could have helped us find a dozen criminals already, by now.” And it had, she hoped, through the forwarding of modus operandi trends she’d sent to FBI offices all over the country.

  “I have the lawyers working on it. I’ve gone up the chain of command as far as the Director. I don’t know what else to do.” Waxman spread his hands on the desk. He had long-fingered hands, elegant and smooth as a concert pianist’s. There was no wedding ring on his finger. “I’ll keep working on it, but I want you to prepare yourself for the worst.”

  Sophie shot to her feet, pushing back her chair. “DAVID is mine. It’s not work product developed on the job. I made it in my spare time, at home. I own it, and I can get a patent on it.”

  Waxman’s eyes narrowed. “And do what with it? It’s built off of ViCAP, and that’s the Bureau’s proprietary database.”

  “There’s a lot you don’t know about DAVID. What it can and can’t do. And no,
it’s not dependent on anything. DAVID just needs a host computer and it can analyze whatever database I send it to, working off hypotheses or keyword searches.”

  “Well. Perhaps you should do a presentation. Educate the higher-ups on how DAVID works and how it can serve the greater good.”

  Sophie sat slowly back down. “I can work on a presentation with some possible case scenarios.”

  “Good. I’ll set it up. The Director and the branch chiefs are coming out for a summit in Honolulu in a few weeks. We can plan a roll-out then.”

  Sophie’s hands prickled with sweat. A public presentation to the Director of the FBI and his branch chiefs terrified her. “I’ll get something ready.”

  “Good. And keep it in mothballs until then.” Waxman did a slow wink, a settling of one eyelid that told her he was perfectly aware she was still using the program. “I wouldn’t want you to get into trouble.”

  “Of course. Anything else, sir?”

  “Don’t forget your appointment with Dr. LaSota.”

  “Yes, sir.” She cut the feed.

  Now, between the situation with her mother, being stalled on the case, and the news about DAVID, she really needed the distraction of going to the gym. But before she did, she called the patent lawyer her father had recommended to get the ownership of DAVID started.

  Sophie was warming up at the speed bag after her jump rope routine when Alika came out of his office, striding toward her. He was wearing his usual gym clothes when he wasn’t fighting—a loose pair of nylon workout shorts and a black tank with the Fight Club logo emblazoned on it. Sophie never got tired of just watching him walk around the gym.

  She kept up her speed bag workout, soothed by the rapid thumping of the swinging leather against her fists.

  Her former coach came to stand beside her. “Sophie, can I have a minute?”

  “I have another five minutes on the bag.” She didn’t look at him.

  “Okay, five minutes, then.” Alika went on around the room, speaking a word of encouragement and correction to the various people working out and sparring in the ring. Sophie was due in the ring for a sparring match in forty-five minutes, up against a Brazilian girl with a black belt in jiu-jitsu. Sophie could tell the girl had an attitude by the aggressive stares the Brazilian kept giving her from her stationary bike in the corner.