Название: The Call of Bravery
Автор: Janice Johnson Kay
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781472027757
isbn:
He paused at the foot of the stairs. “Ms. Woods?”
“Yes.” She stepped onto the porch and drew the door mostly closed behind her. “What can I do for you?”
He was a large man, in his late forties or early fifties at a guess, with a receding hairline and the beginning of a paunch. “I’m with the United States Drug Enforcement Agency. I’d like to talk to you.”
Lia knew she was gaping. “To me?”
He smiled. “You’re not under suspicion, I promise you. I’m hoping that you can help us.”
“Help you.” She must sound like an idiot, but…wow. She’d never even smoked marijuana. Excessive drinking had been a way bigger problem in her high school than drug use. Her crowd in college hadn’t been into drugs, either. Was there any chance he was lying and really with Immigration after all?
“May I explain?” he said.
She blinked. “Yes, sure. Why don’t you— Actually, let’s stay out here on the porch. Give me a moment to check on the kids.”
He remained politely outside while she dashed in, peeked at Walker and Brendan, then tore upstairs to Sorrel’s room. The teenager was indeed using the laptop.
“There’s a government type here I have to talk to,” Lia said. “Will you listen for the little ones and take care of them if they wake up?”
“I guess so.” Sorrel wrinkled her nose. “Unless Arturo’s diaper is gross. I don’t want to do gross.”
“They should keep sleeping for another hour. But just in case. Okay?”
She shrugged, her attention returning to the monitor. “Okay.”
The teenager didn’t know that two-year-old Arturo and eight-month-old Julia were in this country—and being harbored by Lia—illegally; Lia made sure her legitimate foster children never had a clue. Kids came and went here. There was no reason any of them would question why one social worker brought some of them to her door and a different one the others.
Then Lia bounded downstairs and went out on the front porch, closing the door behind her this time. The man turned to face her.
He held out his badge. “I’m Special Agent Wes Phillips.”
She scrutinized the badge, as if she’d know a fake if she saw it, nodded and said, “Please, sit down.”
He gingerly settled into one of the pair of Adirondack chairs. She took the other one.
“I’d invite you in, but I’m a foster parent and have kids napping. Plus, I thought maybe you’d rather we weren’t overheard.”
“I’d definitely rather not be overheard by children.” He hesitated. “This is actually a matter that concerns your neighbors to the south.”
Her first reaction was relief. It was hard to make herself think, to orient herself. The south? “That nice place? Someone new is in it. I’m afraid I haven’t even met them.”
“Have you noticed them coming and going?”
“An occasional car. Either there are several men living there, or else whoever is renting the place has lots of friends.”
He nodded. “We have reason to believe the house is being used by members of a drug distribution network.”
“You’re not talking about methamphetamine, are you?” she asked in alarm. “Are they making it there? Can’t it be really volatile? Are my kids in danger?”
“No, no. We’re frankly not sure what’s up in that house, but don’t believe meth is involved.”
Wariness returning, Lia straightened her spine. “How is it you think I can help you?”
“I came out to determine whether the house can be viewed from yours.” He had his back to it currently, although from here woods blocked all but the rooftop and a corner of the enormous garage. “We’d like to place it under surveillance. Yours is the only building within visual range. What we’d like is to, er, rent your house from you for a period of time.”
“A period of time.”
“It may be weeks to several months.”
She didn’t even have to think about it. “No.”
“I’m sure we could provide you with—”
“No. This is my home. I’m currently caring for five traumatized children. Two of them lost their mother to leukemia this week. One is a teenager prone to acting out. This is their home, too, the only security they have right now. I will not uproot them.”
Plainly, he didn’t like that. “You don’t mind that your nearest neighbors may be dealing drugs?”
“Of course I mind. But what you’re asking is impossible.”
He studied her. “This is a large house.”
Oh, damn. “Yes, it is,” she said cautiously.
He seemed to ponder. “Perhaps it would work best if your neighbors see life continuing as usual here.”
She waited.
“Do you use your attic?”
She’d known that was coming. After a hesitation, Lia admitted, “No. It’s pretty bare-bones up there, though.”
“Would you consider allowing two agents from the DEA to conduct a stakeout from your attic?”
She queried what that meant; he explained. Assuming there actually was an adequate view from upstairs, they would use advanced surveillance equipment to watch the nearby home from the attic windows. The agents could sleep up there as well. He did concede that they’d need to use a bathroom if one wasn’t available in the attic.
“There isn’t,” she said flatly.
“It would also, er, be convenient if you could be persuaded to provide them with meals. We’d give you reimbursement for groceries and an additional stipend, of course.”
The entire time he talked, Lia thought furiously. Would the DEA have any reason to investigate which children had legitimately been placed in her home? Perhaps Arturo and Julia could be moved. They were short-term anyway; she didn’t expect to have them for more than a week or two. Their mother had been swept up in a raid on a tulip bulb farm here in the county and immediately deported. Supposedly a family member would be coming for them if the mother couldn’t make her way back quickly.
Lia might look more suspicious if she refused than if she agreed. And she did hate the idea of something like cocaine or heroin being sold from her next-door neighbor’s house. The whole idea was surreal; she might have expected it in New York City, but not in rural Washington State.
But…weeks СКАЧАТЬ