
Colton Undercover
Author
Jennifer D. Bokal
Reads
18.1K
Chapters
21
Chapter 1
Special Agent Liam Hill, FBI, sat at his desk in a cubicle. His workspace was located in the middle of a group of similar cubicles. The large, windowless room located in the FBIâs headquarters was affectionately referred to as the Rat Maze. The Hoover Building itself was named for the organizationâs longest-serving director, J. Edgar Hoover. Squat, plain, yet imposing, it was reminiscent of its namesake.
His cubicle mate, Constance Hernandez, sat at a desk across from his own. For the past two weeks, Liam and Constance had been tracking down documents associated with a church outside Owl Creek, Idaho. So far, they hadnât found enough information to bring charges. Theyâd received a report that the pastor was coercing his followers into giving him their life savings.
âI donât like this as a federal violation,â said Constance. âItâs not against the law to give away cash. If people want to give all their money to this church, so be it.â
âBut what if they feel as if they donât have any choice?â He paused. âBesides, he advertises online. Communicates with potential followers through the internet. That could be wire fraud.â
âWeak sauce,â said his colleague.
He knew her opinion already. Still, Liam was determined to conduct a full investigation. It was more than his job. It was his duty. âYou know, they put Al Capone in jail for tax fraud.â
Every FBI agent knew about the mob boss from the 1920s. The agency that put him in jail was a grandfather of what would become the modern-day Bureau. âIn case you forgot,â said Constance, âwe donât investigate tax crimes. Thatâs the IRS.â
âAll Iâm saying is that Capone committed much worse crimes than tax evasion. But thatâs what got him locked up. And jail is jail.â
Constance pursed her lips. He couldnât tell if she was considering what he said or thinking up a new argument.
âHill. Hernandez.â The two names were fired, like bullets. Liam looked up to find his supervisor leaning on the cubicle wall. Wayne Parsons, a Black man from Detroit, fit his name. He was the son and grandson of preachers. Whatâs more, heâd inherited a clear and deep baritone voice that was perfect for the pulpit. âTell me everything you know about the Ever After Church. Start with how you came across the information.â
It was Liam whoâd gotten the lead two weeks earlier. He said, âMy momâs former receptionist, Helena, joined the church after a nasty divorce. She eventually moved to their compound in the mountains. Since she had secretarial skills, she was put to work in the churchâs administration building. Once she realized that the churchâs leader, a guy named Markus Acker, kept most of the money being raised for personal expenses, she became disillusioned and left. She reached out to me because she remembered I was with the FBI. According to Helena, Markus has his financial records on a separate computer that is never connected to the internet.â
âThatâs odd,â said Wayne.
Constance picked up the story. âIâve been piecing together Ackerâs background. Heâs a shady dude, even if heâs never been charged with anything. Been pastor at several failed churches over the years.â
âCollect all your information,â said Wayne. âKate Dubois wants a briefing.â
Assistant to the Director, or A-DIC, Kate Dubois oversaw all units that investigated financial crimes for the FBI. Constance lifted her brows. Giving a briefing to the A-DIC was a big deal. She asked, âWhen does Dubois want to hear from us?â
âShe wants a presentation now,â said Wayne. âBut I convinced her to give you ten minutes.â
âAre you kidding?â There was no way he could put together a coherent presentation in such a short amount of time.
âNo joke. Get to work.â Wayne took two steps, stopped, and turned around. âJust so you both know, I put in my retirement papers yesterday. On May first, Iâll be a free man. The career board is meeting in the next few weeks to pick my replacement. The two of you are at the top of the list. Do a good job on this briefing and you might just end up with a promotion.â
For years, Liam had worked with Constance. She was a smart agent, and the closest thing to a friend he had in Washington, DC. It was a shame that she was now his rival. For too long, heâd been stuck in the warren of cubicles. He wanted the promotion and intended to get it.
âWhoever the career board picks,â he said, âno hard feelings.â
Constance sighed. âGet to work, Liam. We only have nine minutes left.â
Liam stood in front of a screen. A large conference table with room for eighteen took up most of the floor space. Chairs on casters surrounded the table. Only seven seats were filled. Aside from Liam, Constance and Wayne, the A-DIC sat at the foot of the table with her entourage of two special agents and a financial analyst.
Everyone in the room was an employee of the FBI. It was true that the Bureau didnât assign uniforms, like in the military. But there was an unspoken dress code for those who worked at the Hoover Building. Everyone wore a dark suit. All the men were also in a white button-down shirt and a necktie. The women had all donned blouses along with understated jewelry.
Liam held a tablet computer that controlled his part of the briefing. He pointed to the enlarged image of a tax document that filled the monitor. âThis is the last return filed with the IRS by the Ever After Church. As you can see, they claim only modest income. According to our sources, the church has taken in well over a million dollars this year alone through member donations.â In his opinion, the donations were coerced from those people.
âUpstairs, you mentioned something about the churchâs leader having a computer that never goes online,â said Wayne. âTell us more.â
âThe CI thinks that Markus enters all his correct financial information into that device.â It felt odd to refer to Helena, a lady who used to make him cookies, as a confidential informant. But this was workânothing personal. âAcker is the only person with access to the device.â
âSo, the only way to see the information is to physically have the computer?â asked Wayne.
âThat,â said Liam, âor copy the hard drive.â
âHow would we do that?â asked Constance.
âSomeone has to infiltrate the church,â he said.
âBut that will take monthsâmaybe even years.â Constance continued, âDoes the Bureau have the resources to spare on such a small case?â
True, most financial crimes the FBI investigated were worth several million dollars or more. But other things were also true. âFirst, we donât know how much Markus Acker has taken from his followers.â The amount could be astronomicalâbut heâd serve nobody by speculating. âAlso, heâs doing more than depleting bank accounts. Heâs ruining lives.â
âThis case merits our attention. Markus Acker is suspected of laundering money for some nefarious organizations. The church is also connected to several deaths,â said Kate Dubois, the first words sheâd spoken since the meeting began. She continued, âIâd like to hear how you plan to get an agent into the church.â
In that moment, he knew what he needed to do to get out of the Rat Maze. And how heâd get the promotion. âI wouldnât just send any agent,â he began. âIâll go undercover.â
âYou?â Constanceâs tone was filled with concern. âYou havenât been in the field, well, ever. Howâre you going to handle an undercover operation?â
The thing was, she wasnât wrong. Liam had passed his CPA exam after his first tryâan unheard-of feat. Heâd then applied to the Bureau and been hired at the age of twenty-four. In the last seven years, heâd been assigned to the financial crimes unit. While heâd worked a variety of cases, he spent most of his time in the Hoover Building. It left a gap in his rĂŠsumĂŠ that would be filled by being the undercover agent on the case.
âBut why are you the one to go undercover?â asked Wayne.
âFor one,â he said, âIâm from Idaho. I grew up in Boise. Itâs close to Owl Creek. So, Iâll know how to talk to the locals.â
The A-DIC said, âI donât like it. You might run into someone from your past. Or someone who still knows your family.â
This was his moment. If he could convince the A-DIC to let him go to Owl Creek, the next move in his career would be assured. Inhaling, he began, âMy parents moved to Arizona five years ago. I have one sister, Allison, whoâs stationed on an airbase in Okinawa. She left seven years back when she got into the Air Force Academy.â
For a full minute, Dubois said nothing. Then, she slowly shook her head and his stomach dropped. âItâs still too close. We canât give you an alias if it could be easily blown.â Then, with the next breath, she looked at Constance. âYou have information on Markus Acker?â
Constance sat up taller. âYes, maâam.â Her presentation was already loaded into the smartboard and was controlled by her own laptop. She typed a few keystrokes and Markusâs face filled the screen with a professional headshot.
One couldnât tell by the photo, but Liam knew that the other man was tall and still fit. He wore his dark blond hair short, and by the looks of it, cut by an expensive stylist. In the photo, he wore a black suit, white shirt and yellow tie.
âMarkus is fifty-five years old,â Constance began. âHe has degrees in both communication and finance.â
He knew all the information already and was hardly listening. How had he blown his chance to work undercover? Then again, he should be asking a different question. How could he get the A-DIC to change her mind?
The first photo was replaced by another. âI pulled this recent picture off the churchâs website. The woman in the picture has been identified as Markusâs fiancĂŠe. Jessie Colton.â
His gaze snapped to the screen. He recognized the woman at once. âDamn,â he said without much thought. âShe hasnât changed at all.â
âYou know Ms. Colton?â Constance asked.
How many years had it been since heâd spoken to anyone in the Colton family? The last time wouldâve been the summer that Allison graduated from high school, and he entered the FBI Academy. âI used to know her, at least. Sheâs the mom of my kid sisterâs best friend. My dad used to joke that if Sarah came over for one more sleepover, heâd be able to write her off on the taxes.â Sure, it was lame dad humor but thereâd also been a nugget of truth to the jest. Sarah was constantly at his house.
âTo be honest, Iâm surprised that you didnât know the subject was dating the mother of a former friend,â said the A-DIC.
A sick feeling dropped into his stomach, like heâd just stepped into something unpleasant. âLike I said, after my parents left Boise, we really havenât kept in touch with anyone from Idaho.â
âThatâs not what I meant, Special Agent Hill. Youâve been building a case on Markus Acker and the Ever After Church, have you not? You should know about his personal life,â she snapped.
There was only one thing for him to say. âYouâre right, maâam.â
âIf I may,â said Constance. âLiam and I divided the work duties. Since heâs been working so closely with the financials, I did a background investigation on Acker. To be honest, this is the first time weâre sharing information.â
âI expect my teams to work as a cohesive unit. But I understand that this investigation is moving quickly. From now one, consult with one another. Weâre the FBI, not the Keystone Cops for chrissake.â Leaning forward, Dubois rested her elbows on the tabletop. âThe fact that you know Jessie Colton is interesting.â
âI wouldnât say that I know her,â he said carefully. Correcting a superior was the same as swimming in dangerous waters. âBut as a teenager, I knew her daughter well. Hell, she used to go on vacation with us.â
âWhy is that?â asked Wayne. âWhat was the Colton home like?â
To be honest, Liam hadnât thought about Sarah since he left Idaho. But now that she was top of mind, it was amazing how much he could remember. Sheâd been a sweet kid who liked to read. In fact, her taste in books was well beyond her years. He recalled a specific weekend that heâd come home from college. Sitting at the kitchen table, he read War and Peace while eating breakfast. Sarah wandered into the kitchen and pointed to the book in his hand. Tolstoy, huh? I liked Anna Karenina better. Theyâd spent the next hour talking about literature.
The squeaking of casters brought him back to the conference room. Heâd been quiet for too long. He could feel Wayneâs question hanging in the air. What was the Colton home like?
He let out a long breath. âSarahâs home life was crap. Her parents werenât abusive, or anything like that. But her mother and father split up when she was in elementary school. Dad was only around sometimes. Mom always had a flair for the dramatic. Her brother was a good guyâolder than her, younger than me.â
âDo you think sheâd remember you?â A-DIC Dubois asked.
âIâd hope so,â he said, offended that anyone suggest Sarah forgot about him. âI was the one who taught her how to drive.â
Dubois leaned back in her seat. The image of Jessie Colton still filled the screen. âSpecial Agent Hill, youâre certain that your family hasnât kept in touch with the crowd from Boise?â
He wasnât sure if it were a question or a comment. Still, there was only one thing he could say. âThatâs correct.â
âWhat about your sister?â she asked.
When the family gathered for Christmas last year, Liam and Allison had sat outside in the balmy Tucson evening. Lamenting the heat, sheâd complained, âI miss Idaho. Itâs not Christmas without a little snow.â
âYouâre on leave,â heâd said. âYou could take a week and visit old friends.â
Shaking her head, Allison had said, âI lost touch with everyone when I graduated. The Air Force Academy doesnât leave much time for socializationâespecially for people who live hundreds of miles away.â
âEven Sarah?â heâd asked, incredulous.
âEven Sarah,â sheâd echoed. âI think weâre social media friends. But I never use those apps so Iâm not even sure.â
Liamâs memory came and went in the span of a heartbeat. He didnât hesitate to answer the A-DICâs question this time. âAllison hasnât had any contact with the Coltons, either.â
âSo, neither Sarah Colton nor her mother know that youâre in the FBI.â Again, not quite a question, not quite a statement.
âWell, thatâs not entirely accurate,â he said, measuring his words. âSarah and my sister had just graduated from high school right before I headed off to Quantico for training. I assume she remembers that I was going to the academy.â Liam becoming an FBI agent had been a big deal for the family. His parents had thrown a going-away party. Of course, Sarah had attended.
âBut she doesnât know what youâre doing now.â
He knew what Dubois was thinking. His pulse began to race with excitement and apprehension both. âWe havenât been in touch personally since that summer, so I doubt she knows any more about me than I know about her.â Which was absolutely nothing.
âDo we have any intel on Jessie Coltonâs children?â Dubois directed her gaze at Constance.
âUm, no, maâam.â Her shoulders were shrugged in tight, probably preparing for another brutal comment.
Using his tablet computer, Liam accessed his sisterâs little-used social media accounts. From there, he found the friends list. Sarah Colton was among those with whom Allison had connected. He followed the link to Sarahâs profile. The lanky kid with braces had been replaced by a statuesque woman. âSarah still lives in Boise,â he said, reading the details listed on her profile. âShe graduated from Boise State with a masterâs degree in library sciences. She works at the downtown library. Never married. No kids. No current romantic partner. But she does have a cat named Tolstoy.â
âWhereâd you get all that information?â Wayne asked.
âMy sisterâs social media profile,â said Liam.
âI thought you said your sister and Sarah werenât friends anymore,â said Wayne.
Liam exited Sarahâs profile and opened his sisterâs. He checked for the latest post. âAllison hasnât accessed the account for three years but itâs still online.â
Dubois picked up a pen and tapped the end on the table. There was no other sound in the room and Liamâs heart began to beat with the tempo. âYouâve got your wish, Special Agent Hill. Iâm sending you to Idaho, but you wonât be undercover per se. Youâll go to Boise and contact Sarah Colton. From there, I want you to rekindle your friendship. If she trusts you, her mother might, too. These two women are the shortest path to Acker, I can feel it.â
Liam was getting exactly what he wanted. Why was his gut twisted into knots of unease? âSarah knows that Iâm with the Bureau. Even if sheâs not suspicious, her mother and Acker will be.â
âLeave that to us,â said the A-DIC. âWeâll change your life, online at least. Youâll be given a new background.â She paused, seeming to consider what to say next. âYouâll be a banker whoâs in Boise looking for real estate for a client.â
âIt should work,â he said. Still, the apprehension coiled in his gut.
âOf course it will work.â Dubois stood. Everyone else in the room got to their feet, as well.
Liam rose slowly. âThank you for this opportunity, maâam.â
âDonât thank me yet. I expect results, Special Agent Hill. And soon.â
Dubois left. Her retinue followed.
Only Constance and Wayne remained.
âIâll be in touch with the particulars of your background and some training to get you up to speed on undercover work,â said his supervisor. âBut go home and make arrangements to leave. Youâll be out of DC soon. A word of advice?â Wayne dropped his hand on Liamâs shoulder. âYouâre a good agent but donât screw up. What happens over the next few weeks has the power to define your career for good or bad.â
âPoint taken.â
With that, Wayne left the conference room.
Constance quietly packed up her laptop. For a moment, neither said anything. Finally, he cleared his throat. âI should probably thank you for covering for me with Dubois.â
She gave a quiet laugh. âYou probably should.â She zipped up her bag before saying, âLooks like that promotion will be yours when you get back.â
She was probably right. Still, he knew enough to say, âYou never know. Youâre a hell of an agent.â
âItâs probably for the best. My wife doesnât like all the late hours Iâm keeping now. Although the raise wouldâve helped to pay for IVF.â His work friend had shared the cost of each round of in vitro fertilization. The cost was astronomical. It almost made him feel guilty for wanting the promotion so damn bad.
Slipping the strap of her computer bag over her shoulder, she continued, âIâll keep looking into Markus Ackerâs personal life. Anything I find thatâs germane will get passed on.â
âI appreciate having you in my corner.â
âJust remember me when youâre assistant to the director and get to pick your own minions,â she joked.
He laughed. âItâs a deal. Although, youâll never be a minion.â
With a small wave, she slipped through the door and was gone. It left him alone. He knew he should be happy about the caseâelated, really. Heâd gotten the chance to prove that he was a capable field agent and not just another bean counter with a badge and gun.
Yet, blood hummed through his veins and left him jittery.
Was it because this would be his first foray out of the confines of Washington, DC? Or was there more?
He picked up his tablet computer and pressed the home button. His sisterâs social media account was still open. Instead of exiting the app, he found Sarah Coltonâs profile for a second time. In the picture, she wore a light blue dress and held her striped tabby, Tolstoy. Her light brown hair brushed the tops of her shoulders, and the corners of her green eyes crinkled with her smile. The last time he saw her, sheâd been a skinny kid, barely out of high school and only eighteen years old. The long lines of youth had been replaced with womanly curves.
Looking at her profile, he sighed. He knew what was bothering him and why.
It was no secret that Sarah had harbored a huge crush on Liam when they were growing up. For years, he didnât care. After all, she was just a kid. But all of that changed right before he went away to the FBI Academy. Sarah, whoâd recently turned eighteen years old, mentioned that she was legally an adult but still hadnât gotten her driverâs license.
He remembered the conversation like it happened last week and not over seven years ago.
âWhy no license?â heâd asked.
Sarah sat at the breakfast bar in the kitchen. âNate tried to teach me,â she said, mentioning her brother. âBut we fought. Mom tried, but she freaked out.â She sighed, her shoulders slumping. âI make progress with Dad, but heâs not around much.â
âIâm home for a few weeks. I can take you out,â he offered, happy to fill his days somehow.
It had only taken a weekâs worth of lessons and she passed the test on the first try.
Outside the DMV, she proudly held up her temporary license. With a big smile on her face, sheâd announced, âI couldnât have gotten this without you.â
Heâd been so proud that heâd opened his arms for a hug.
She stepped into his embrace, and an instant later her lips found his.
Even now, his face burned with shame. Over the years heâd seen the looks on Sarahâs face each time she glanced in his direction. Heâd been a fool to ignore her longing.
He stepped away. âSarah,â he mumbled, the feeling of her kiss still on his lips. âI canât. We canât. Iâm so much older than you.â
Her eyes flooded with tears. âI just thought. I hoped.â She wiped her cheeks with her sleeve and dropped her gaze. âOhmigod, Iâm so embarrassed.â
âDonât be embarrassed,â he said, trying to sound soothing. âIt happened once, but it canât happen again.â
She ran off crying. In the moment, he convinced himself that it was best to let her go. Even then, he knew that he should have done or said something.
He left for the FBI Academy a week later. Sarah attended his going-away party but the two didnât speak to the other.
He glanced once more at her profile picture. Soon, he was going to have to face the grown-up version of Sarah Colton. And to be honest, he wasnât sure what kind of reaction he was going to get.
Harlequin