Emmy raised her half-empty glass in silent toast to the studious waitress, then took a sip of the West Coast — style IPA, savoring the undercurrent of zesty orange and piney hops. They had been sitting at the table against the terrace’s railing well before the sun had set, watching boats transiting the inlet in and out of Alamitos Bay without seeing what Rick had promised would be there.
“I really need to get going back to San Diego,” she said.
“What’s the hurry, Punky?”
She gave him an impish smile, and he chuckled. Few people knew Rick better than she did, not even his fellow special agents at the FBI, and she knew he was only trying to get under her skin. He had bestowed on her the nickname when she was just a little girl with dark hair in pigtails and rosy cheeks, but she never gave him the satisfaction of knowing she secretly liked it.
She tipped back her glass and drained the rest of the beer. “I have a two-hour drive,” she said. “One beer is enough.”
She wasn’t dressed for a night on the town and wore dark gray jeans, ripped at the knees, with a plain white T-shirt that was loose and anything but flattering. A pair of red Vans and a red zip-up hoodie completed her casual ensemble and clashed with Rick’s obnoxiously bright Hawaiian shirt that made him look like a Black Magnum, P.I., minus the mustache.
He drained his glass when he noticed the waitress returning with two fresh ones, then nodded across the water. “Why go back? It’s still early, and my boat’s just over there.”
“Don’t you mean the Bureau’s boat?”
Rick shrugged and flashed her a toothy smile as the waitress set the beers on the table between them and absconded with the empty glasses. “That’s what I meant.”
For as long as she could remember, Rick loved to tease her. But sooner or later, he was going to have to come to terms with the fact that she had grown up; she wasn’t his best friend’s daughter, but his colleague.
“You can let me know what happens,” she said. As close as they were, she hadn’t come all this way just to have a drink with him on a random Thursday. She had kept him at arm’s length for a reason, but it would have been worth it if his intel had paid off and
“Stubborn like your daddy,” he muttered.
“I didn’t get to where I am by being docile.” She pushed back from the table and jumped to her feet. “Enjoy your beers, Uncle Rick.”
“Oh, come on,” he said, holding his hands up in mock surrender. “I was only messing with you.”
She appraised him silently for a moment. “No, you weren’t.”
If she was being honest, she
Though she admitted the ten-minute drive to the marina would be better than the two hours it was going to take her to get back to San Diego, she’d rather walk the hundred miles than tread through a minefield of shared history that was better left buried.
“It’s a boat. You’re in the Navy now.”
“I’m
“Close enough.”
They stared at each other in silent defiance for a moment before she felt her phone vibrate in her hand. His phone must have also vibrated, because he ended the staring contest and fished it from his pocket. She took the opportunity to check the notification on the screen and saw that there was a message waiting for her in the secure portal. After a cursory glance over her shoulder, she unlocked her phone with a six-digit passcode and biometric scan, then opened the secure messaging application and entered another unique passcode to connect to the encrypted network.
Her momentary desire to leave gone, she sat back down while her phone completed the download process. Feeling the first bit of hope she’d had all night, she leaned forward in her chair and opened the inbox, ignoring Rick, who was probably doing the exact same thing. She entered the onetime code to decrypt the message, eager to see the latest message from the National Security Agency.
The NSA had been monitoring routine communications between