Read Dan & Tyler 2 - Wintergreen Online
Authors: Jane Davitt
"They were confident and well-prepared," Cole said tightly, his control still ragged around the edges. "I wouldn't have green-lighted the missions if they weren't. The jobs were standard, as much as they ever can be. They met with failure because they were betrayed. They didn't just die; they were captured, killed, and their bodies left where they'd be found. Too many similarities there, too -- I suspect whoever warned the targets told them what to do with the bodies."
"I'm sorry," he told Cole, aware of the inadequacy of the words, but needing to say them. Cole gave him a sharp look, his customary calm restored, on the surface, at least. "Sorry for the loss of three people you once worked with and, as I recall, liked? Or sorry that you can't help me because you persist in the assertion that you're damaged beyond repair?"
"Both," Tyler said shortly. "If you want me to find your leak, well, I can't. You said it yourself; no one would believe that I'd come out of retirement, and I'd need to be involved, get to know the players… You'd just spook whoever it was, because it'd be obvious what I was doing. Use your own Internal Affairs. Hell, shoot 'em all up with babble juice or hook them to a lie detector."
Cole snorted. "You know how pointless that would be. No, what I had in mind was less hands on. I was hoping that if I gave you the names of the six people I suspect, and as much information as I have, you could find the person responsible. You wouldn't even have to leave this charmingly rustic retreat of yours if you didn't want to."
"No. I tried. I can't trust this to anyone else, and I don't have time--" Cole's face twisted with frustration again. "I can't make the connections the way that you do. I can't dig as deeply. And… these are people I work with. I look at them after reading their files, and I see them--"
"Through a glass darkly. Yeah, I know." Suspicion and mistrust were insidious emotions and easy for the traitor to identify. If the person selling information picked up on Cole's doubts, then the next hit, the next body, might be closer to home. Something told Tyler that Cole was making this sound simpler than it was, but refusing to help was impossible. He'd had no choice but to resign when his nerve had gone, but it didn't mean that he felt no guilt about walking away. Cole wasn't the only one driven by patriotism.
He took a deep breath and released it, letting it take away some of the nagging anxiety he'd been feeling. This wasn't a problem. Cole just wanted him to do research. It was even good to know that, for all that had happened between them, Cole still trusted him. Their relationship had been based on respect, and Tyler had felt more than one pang of regret at the thought that Cole would have seen his resignation as a kick in the teeth. "Okay. I'll take a look at what you have, but I can't promise anything."
"Thank you," Cole said. He cleared his throat. "Do I need to tell you that the details of this investigation cannot be shared with young Mr. Seaton, for his own safety as much as anything else?"
"He could, perhaps, be relocated until your work is done?" Cole suggested. "Or you could find an alternative place to stay and leave him here? Failing that, I'd be more than willing to pay for him to go to somewhere that would appeal to a boy his age."
"Disney to shake hands with Mickey?" Tyler said. "Cole, he's twenty, and he's not going anywhere, and neither am I. I'll take care of it."
"I won't. Drop it and let's get down to business. You're going to need to reinstate my clearance so that I can access the databases I need." Tyler dug his cold hands into his pockets. "Can you do that without setting off any alarms?"
"For some of them, I'll give you my passwords." Cole smiled thinly at Tyler's jerk of surprise. "I'll change them after this is over, of course. For the databases I'd have to access on site with biometric checks, you'll have to tell me what you need to know and I'll take it from there. For now, start with this."
"Everything I have," Cole said simply. "Files on the suspects, the three targets, the agents who died. It's encrypted; check your e-mail for the key. I'll send it tonight. Computer logs, security footage -- I have those in the car."
For a man who didn't let his right hand know that his left had put toothpaste on the brush, all this was a sign of trust so profound -- and an indicator of how seriously Cole was taking this -- that Tyler was left with nothing to say.
Habit kept Tyler from revealing too much of what he felt, although it would have been darkly amusing to see Cole's reaction to a sentimental outpouring from him. "I don't know yet. Maybe." Tyler shrugged. "I'll manage."
They arranged the routine details about communication of any questions or results in short, guarded sentences, their voices low from habit, standing close enough that their lips couldn't have been read by anyone watching from a distance. It wasn't what he'd wanted, but part of Tyler was stirring awake after a long sleep, invigorated, eager. God, was he actually looking forward to working again? The thought of that scared him spitless.
They began to walk back to the cabin, the sparse remnants of the snow crunching under their feet. The sun was going down, and it was getting colder, the bare branches of the trees stark against a pale pink sky fading to blue.
Tyler didn't bother to correct Cole this time; he'd learned to answer to many names over the years and lost any attachment he might have had to the one his parents had given him. "And when I do?"
Tyler that Dan had heard the last part of their conversation at least. "Let me get you what you'll need from my car." He glanced at Dan and then back at Cole. "And remember what you promised," he said, pitching his voice low enough that Dan probably couldn't hear him.
"Well, that was a flying visit," Dan said. Tyler looked like shit, the way he was after a bad dream, his face a washed-out color, shivering as if he was cold and wet and naked. He'd held it together until Cole had driven away, and now he was losing it as Dan watched.
"Cole doesn't m-mess around when he's got something to s-say," Tyler managed to say through the shuddering. Dan could hear his teeth chattering. "Good news: he doesn't want me to kill anyone."
He got Tyler tucked in and then filled a hot water bottle and used the kettle he'd boiled to make a hot toddy, heavy on the whiskey and honey. His grandmother had shown him how to make them as a kid, when he was way too young to drink them. Amber whiskey and a translucent drizzle of honey, topped with a splash of lemon juice, the whiff of citrus tart enough to make his mouth water, and a dash of ginger. She swore her toddies had kept his grandfather alive one winter when he had bronchitis, and she could have been right, given their pungency. If he could get a few swallows of toddy into Tyler, Dan was pretty sure the shaking would stop.
"It's
your
hot water bottle," Dan pointed out. He flipped the sheets back and tossed the bottle next to Tyler, who glared at him and then reluctantly dragged it against his stomach. "Drink this."
Tyler sniffed suspiciously, but must have approved of old-fashioned remedies, because he sat up and held out his hand for the heavy earthenware mug, sturdy enough to have survived months of Dan's rough and ready washing up without a chip. Dan liked the smooth glaze on it and the deep blue color, patterned with swirling shapes his brain kept trying to make into objects and failing.
Dan sat on the bed, put the mug into Tyler's hand, and helped him raise it to his lips, steadying it. "Do you mind?" Tyler snarled, batting at Dan's hand. "I'm not an invalid, and last time I looked, I wasn't a baby, either."
"Two beers and you're slopping all over me; three and you're close to passing out," Tyler said, which was an exaggeration Dan intended to take issue with when he'd gotten Tyler back to normal.
Dan settled down next to Tyler, close enough that their arms touched, so that he'd know when Tyler began to relax, tight muscles loosening. He'd learned not to push at times like this, and sometimes to just walk away and let Tyler battle the demons alone. Mostly, though, he just got close and held on, and that worked well enough.
When the mug was empty, Tyler sighed, put it down on the bedside table, and turned to Dan, pulling him in for a hug. The quilt and the lump of the hot water bottle were barriers, but Dan ignored them, nuzzling into Tyler's neck and enjoying, as always, the comfort to be had in Tyler's muscular solidity. Tyler felt good to hug; it was simple as that.
"He's got a, uh, a research job for me," Tyler murmured sleepily into Dan's hair. "That's all. Going to need the computer and some privacy, but after that, suppose we take off, huh? Find a sunny beach and get smashed out of our skulls on drinks with paper umbrellas in them. Live the tourist cliché for a while."
Tyler stroked his hair and then moved a hand down to the back of Dan's neck, fingers finding places to touch that make Dan do some shuddering of his own. Tyler knew him too well now. "You can bring me coffee and ignore me when I get bad-tempered."
"I can follow a recipe," Dan said, "and you'd done most of the hard work before company showed up early. I'll save you some if I'm feeling in a generous mood or you've put in too much of whatever it is that makes it hot."