The Long Game (The Fixer #2)

CHAPTER 40

“What could have possibly possessed you to come here?” Emilia gave her twin the single most aggrieved look I’d ever seen my life. “You’re grounded,” she reminded him. “You’re the prime suspect in a murder case. And I specifically told you not to come.”

We’d made it out of the tunnel and taken refuge in a nearby coffee shop without getting caught by Hardwicke security—probably because security didn’t want to catch too many Hardwicke students.

“It seemed like a good idea at the time?” Asher offered his sister an eighty-watt smile.

“This is the very definition of a bad idea,” Henry told him.

Asher sighed. “I always get those two confused.”

I’d promised Ivy I wouldn’t call Asher. I’d promised her that I wouldn’t e-mail him or go see him. Technically, I hadn’t said anything about what I would do if he came to see me.

“Are you okay?” I asked him.

“The lapels of this shirt will never be the same,” Asher replied mournfully. “But I will persevere.”

“No,” I said. “Are you okay? After the past few days—”

“Lo, it is a story for the ages,” Asher intoned. “Of a boy wrongly accused and a text sent by someone who, it turned out, was not even his sister.”

“I might actually kill you,” Emilia told him. She turned to Henry. “I might actually kill him.”

“I would prefer you did not,” Henry told her. “Though I certainly understand the impulse.”

“I’ve missed you guys!” Asher declared. “Except for Emilia. I still see Emilia all the time.”

For fear that Emilia might actually do her brother physical harm, I intervened. “What did you find out?” I asked Emilia.

Emilia turned her attention from Asher to me, and as she did, I saw her guard going up, saw the transition from a much aggrieved sister to a person nothing and no one could touch. “Nothing worth repeating,” she said.

I recognized, in her voice, that Emilia had heard something tonight. I wondered how much of what she’d heard had sounded familiar to her. I wondered how she was holding up with that, but knew she wouldn’t tell me, just like she wouldn’t betray anyone else’s confidences about John Thomas.

“Anyone who might have had a motive?” I asked.

Emilia shrugged. “Motive? Yes. Opportunity? Ability? Not so much.”

“On the subject of ability,” Vivvie cut in, “we should add hacking to the list. If the hedgehog was a student, he or she would have had to figure out how to hack the security feeds via the campus wireless network.”

“The hedgehog?” Emilia asked, wrinkling her brow.

“I approve!” Asher declared. “Though I am somewhat hurt that the lot of you have been hedgehog hunting in my absence. Just because a person is suspected of premeditated murder doesn’t mean they don’t have feelings.”

“What would it take to hack the security feeds?” Henry asked Emilia, ignoring Asher with the expertise of someone who had been strategically ignoring him for a very long time.

“I don’t know,” Emilia told Henry. “But I can find out.”

To say that Emilia was good with computers would have been an understatement. I had very little doubt that given the time and motivation, she could figure out how to hack the security feeds herself.

“Did you get anything out of John Thomas’s friends?” Vivvie asked Henry.

“I discovered how John Thomas found out about my family’s personal issues, how he got ahold of Hardwicke medical records.”

I’d guessed, the day John Thomas died, that he had obtained the information about Henry’s father from his own. I’d overheard enough of Ivy’s conversations to recognize just how easily a person could pick up on things they weren’t supposed to know.

“Congressman Wilcox kept files,” Henry said. “On major and minor players in Washington. Not that uncommon, among a certain set.”

My thoughts went to Ivy’s files. Her program. Ivy’s clients could count on her absolute discretion—until and unless something happened to her. If she went off the grid, the program started releasing secrets.

“What is uncommon,” Henry commented, “is that John Thomas had somehow managed to get access to his father’s files. I suspect his father had no idea.”

No wonder John Thomas had paled when I’d threatened to tell the congressman what he was up to. It would have been bad enough if John Thomas’s father had simply let the information slip in front of his son, but if John Thomas had acquired the information without the congressman knowing . . .

That wouldn’t have gone well for John Thomas.

“What other information do you think was in those files?” Vivvie asked, wide-eyed. “I mean . . . are we talking about blackmail material, or BLACKMAIL MATERIAL, all caps?” She punctuated those words with an elaborate gesture.