The only thing wrong with this picture of doggy obedience was that Hugo had hidden them in the first place. The game he’d made up himself usually amused her. Not today. That’s because she knew that he knew she was about to leave him alone for hours, and he didn’t like to be left. She couldn’t account for his sixth sense about such things. He was scary smart at reading people, especially his handler.
She shook her head. “Maybe you should be going to this interview instead of me.”
*
Cole sat stiffly on one of several chairs placed at intervals along the hallway of the Baltimore office of the Drug Enforcement Administration, waiting for her name to be called.
All of her tactical gear had been left behind at security, making her feel unusually light. She looked cool and professional, but she didn’t feel that way. Her tie felt as if it was a hangman’s noose. Her starched collar rubbed the back of her neck. And, where her hat sat on her brow, a thin sheen of sweat had begun to form. Normally she didn’t wear much makeup. But today, she had applied a heavy-duty concealer to try to hide the worst of the black eye she had gotten while subduing a suspect a week ago.
“Officer Jamieson?”
Cole jumped to her feet at the sound of her name. She hadn’t even noticed the door opening on her right.
A youngish man in a tie and rolled shirtsleeves gave her a brief impersonal smile. “Follow me please, ma’am.”
He moved down past half a dozen closed doors until he arrived at the last one on the right. He knocked then opened the door. “Agent Lattimore will see you now.”
Cole stepped into the room to be met by a tall, middle-aged, balding man in a nondescript off-the-rack suit. He had Fed written all over him.
He came forward and extended his hand. “Officer Jamieson. I’m Agent John Lattimore. It’s a pleasure to meet you.”
“The same, sir.” Cole shook his hand firmly.
“Have a seat. And please make yourself comfortable. We aren’t being formal today. I understand you go by the name Cole. May I call you that?”
“Yes, sir.” She felt his gaze, though seemingly casual, following her every move as she sat and removed her hat, balancing it on her knee.
He sauntered back behind his desk, his gaze never leaving her. “I’m sure you’re wondering why you’re here.”
“Yes, sir.” Cole made herself relax back into her chair. “I expect you’re looking for local personnel for some sort of team.” He nodded. “Would you like me to tell you a little bit about myself?”
“Not necessary. I know everything I need to know.”
Cole saw him glance at the open folder on his desk. “You’re a first-year K-9 officer with the Montgomery County, Maryland, Police Department. You grew up around dogs. Your first canines were a yellow Lab named Homer and a Bluetick Coonhound by the name of Marge. You were athletic in high school. Played soccer, correct? You also participated in dog sports competitions. Your college transcript is well above average and yet, after you were wait-listed for law school, you joined law enforcement. Your background in Agility training and AKC rallies made you a natural fit for the K-9 law enforcement program. You have one sibling, a sister named Rebecca, who’s a veterinarian. From time to time you still serve as an instructor for her obedience classes.”
“Wow, sir, that is a thorough investigation.” Someone had done his homework on her. Which meant DEA had been thinking about her longer than a few days.
Cole wondered fleetingly what else was in that report. Did they know she needed to do laundry and sometimes failed to remember to put out her trash cans in time for the weekly pickup? Did they know about more private things, like her marriage to undercover Agent Scott Lucca, and what a disaster that had been? Of course they would.
That’s when reality hit her. This wasn’t just an interview. It was more like a security clearance check.
Her pulse ticked up with equal amounts of excitement and anxiety. Was she being considered for some kind of task force? Or was Scott in trouble again? Were they looking to her for information about him? Had the two-year-old case made its way to court, after all?
Her heart began to pump in heavy thuds. She wasn’t going to defend him but she couldn’t imagine testifying in any way against Scott, even if he was her ex.
At that moment the door opened and the young man in rolled shirtsleeves appeared. “Your next appointment has arrived, sir.”
“Good.” Lattimore smiled at Cole. “I’d like you to meet the team leader and your potential partner in our task force operation.”
“Great.” Task force operation. Not about Scott. This was about her, after all.
Cole stood up, preparing a smile of welcome for whomever stood on the other side of the door. Perhaps she was doing better in the interview than she thought, if Lattimore was prepared to introduce her to the team leader.
“Show him in, Pierce.”
One second, Cole was rising with a polite smile of welcome on her face. The very next, she was trying to control her breathing.
“Hello, Nikki.”
She knew that voice. That face. And those damned seductive dimples.
It wasn’t supposed to happen like this.
For two years, she had engineered things so that she would never again have to be in the same room with Scott Lucca. That plan had been working just fine, right up to a second ago.