CHAPTER SEVENTY-EIGHT
February 18, 2000, 4 p.m.
FBI Field Office, Santa Fe
During the weeks Kathleen Topolsky had sat at her desk taking phone calls from agents luckier than her, she'd had occasion to dream. Having thought she'd given up daydreaming in junior high, she'd been surprised to find herself drifting away, lost in thought until a phone would ring with yet another call from yet another agent with yet another problem or need or request. Those daydreams always had one consistent highlight: Her vindication. Perhaps something would be found in Roswell and her earlier calls for caution would be noted. Perhaps her superiors found themselves in need of her expert advice on people she knew better than anyone else. One of her favorites involved her quitting the Bureau only to have them beg her to come back. Another involved the aliens making contact and demanding her as their liaison because they knew her. All involved her reinstatement as a field agent and exoneration on all charges, real or perceived. All left her smiling and feeling marginally better until the next phone call came in, reminding her once again that she'd been relegated to a desk job doing essentially nothing and making her reach for another daydream. This cycle of reality and fantasy had served her well through long, boring days that made her wonder if she needed a new job. What was the point of being an FBI agent if the sum total of one's duties was answering phones?
Sitting on the bench outside the Bureau's Field Office with her venti soy half fat double shot latte balanced on her lap and a stranger who knew an awful lot about her, it appeared her vindication had come at last. Finally, she thought with an inward mental sigh. Finally, someone had listened. Finally, someone was coming to her for input. Finally, finally, finally...but first things first.
"I'm afraid you have me at a disadvantage," Topolsky said. "You know who I am, but you are...?"
The nattily dressed man held out a hand. "Brian Samuels. Agent Brian Samuels."
"From this office?" Topolsky asked.
"From the Special Unit," Samuels answered. "Just like you."
"But which branch?" Topolsky persisted. "I've never heard of you, so I'm guessing not this one."
"Washington," Samuels answered.
Topolsky's eyes widened. Only the very top of the Unit food chain were in Washington, which was not regarded as a branch; Washington was Mount Olympus. "Wow," she said, her hand faltering ever so slightly on her latte before she steadied it. "Washington calling on little old me? Who would have thought."
"We're calling on a number of people who appear to share our concern that the alien threat isn't being taken seriously," Samuels said. "The Unit hasn't been itself since Agent Summers died. Too many things are falling through the cracks."
"Tell me about it," Topolsky said ruefully. "There are days I forget I even work for the Unit. Most days it feels like I'm working for any old FBI branch."
"Exactly," Samuels agreed. "You and I, all of us, joined the Unit for two reasons: We were the best of the best, and we wanted the best. None of us are interested in being ordinary agents, but that's largely what we've become. And no wonder—the plan is to fold the Unit back into the Bureau, making us ordinary agents in more than name only."
"So...what are you saying? Is the Unit getting smaller? Are we looking at layoffs?"
"Word is we're being disbanded," Samuels answered.
"Disbanded?" Topolsky exclaimed. "Why? We held a live alien once, for God's sake. Why would they disband us?"
"Ask Director Freeh."
"The director?" Topolsky said in astonishment. "No. No, there's no way the director would be in favor of that, not with the records at his disposal. He knows the alien threat is real, assuming he can read, that is. Why would he disband our last, best hope to fight it?"
"Why, indeed?" Samuels agreed. "What I meant was, ask Director Freeh because he talks to the congressmen and senators who give us our mandates and pay our bills. The Unit is expensive, and with no obvious threats for a while now, or at least none they acknowledge..."
"They don't want to fork over the money," Topolsky finished in disgust. "Unbelievable. Unbelievable."
"We'd like to show the people signing the checks that there's no need to disband us, that we can work smaller and smarter," Samuels went on. "We're gathering our best and brightest in Washington...and we'd like to extend an invitation for you to join us there."
"You mean a transfer?" Topolsky said. "I'm not sure Agent Stevens would approve of that."
"He wouldn't have to," Samuels said. "Orders would come from Washington."
Topolsky hesitated, incredibly tempted but still skeptical. "And what would I be doing in this new job, Agent Samuels? Because even if I do think I had a raw deal in Roswell, I know I'm not one of the Unit's 'best and brightest'. Why me?"
"Because you were the one who went to Roswell," Samuels answered. "You have intimate knowledge of the suspects. You felt there was something to the recent sighting, and so do we. We'd like to distill the Unit down to those who are still able to recognize alien activity when they see it."
"And those who can't?" Topolsky said. "What happens to them?"
Samuels smiled faintly. "Your concern is admirable, Agent, but the Unit is fighting for its very existence. We need to both downsize and prove our relevance if we're going to survive. The latter involves convincing a Congress who hasn't seen irrefutable evidence like the '47 crash that aliens are still here. The former involves the careful selection of a core group of agents who know what they're looking for. Anyone left over can always take a job within the Bureau, and if they truly don't believe aliens are still among us or are incapable of recognizing the signs of their presence, perhaps they should. Perhaps they'd be better off."
Topolsky eyes dropped to her cooling coffee. "The first time I knew aliens were real was when Agent Summers was murdered. I'd read all the reports, of course, looked at all the photographs...but that was the first time it really hit home. That it became personal." She paused. "He hired me, you know. Right from my graduation ceremony at Quantico. Totally out of the blue."
Samuels nodded. "We know. Agent Summers didn't do a lot of his own recruiting, so we made a point of looking up those he'd handpicked. Yet another reason I'm here now."
A church bell clanged, and Topolsky glanced at her watch. "I have to go. I'll give what you said some thought. Where can I reach you?"
Samuels handed her a business card. "Call me. Any time of the day or night. This would be an official transfer, so pay and benefits remain the same and you'd get the standard relocation allowance in addition to a group of people who'll take you seriously. You're wasting your time in a desk job, Kathleen. Everything you know, everything you learned out there is wasted. Please don't let yourself go to waste."
Exactly how I've been feeling, Topolsky thought as she took the card from him. "Oh, and one more thing," Samuels added. "Don't mention this to Agent Stevens. It might not surprise you to learn that he wasn't considered one of our best and brightest."
"Agent Stevens is a good agent," Topolsky allowed, feeling a moral obligation to at least make a show of defending her boss.
"That he is," Samuels agreed. "But being a good agent doesn't make one a good Unit agent. We're a different breed altogether, which is why you haven't been able to get through to him. You'd have better luck in Washington." He gave her a small, almost courtly bow. "It's been nice talking to you, Agent Topolsky. I hope to hear from you soon."
Topolsky took her time walking back into the building, tossing her now cold latte into a trash can on the way. It was not uncommon for one branch of the Bureau to poach an agent from another, and not uncommon for that to cause hard feelings, so not saying anything to Stevens made sense. Relocation allowances were standard, covering the cost of finding an apartment and moving one's belongings. One frequently transferred at a higher rate of pay, but if the concern was that the Unit was being disbanded for budgetary reasons, they couldn't very well offer her any more money. And none of this even began to touch the sheer enormity of transferring to Washington, of all places. She felt like Cinderella being asked to the ball...and that bothered her. There was something a little off about this offer, a niggling feeling that all was not right. It followed her all the way back to her desk, where she ignored her ringing phone and the rapidly blinking message light on her answering machine and did a little due diligence. Agent Brian Samuels, it turned out, was totally legit, having joined the Bureau in 1989 with Washington his first and only posting. She lingered over his photo, wondering if Summers had handpicked him too given that Washington was a rare destination for any agent, never mind one fresh out of Quantico. Naturally that information wasn't available in the Bureau's database because, officially, the Special Unit didn't exist.
"Agent Topolsky?"
Topolsky jumped, managing to clear her computer screen before Stevens rounded the cubicle corner with his assistant, Pamela, on his heels. "Agent Stevens! I was just..."
"Not answering your phone, that's what you were 'just'," Stevens said testily. "Agent Bering has been trying to reach you for some time now. He said he left several messages...which I gather is true," he added with a pointed look at her frantically blinking answering machine.
"Sorry, sir," Topolsky said quickly. "I just got back from my break, and—"
"I don't care if you just got back from Mars," Stevens interrupted. "Agents in the field should not be left hanging. Get on it."
A flicker of defiance stirred in Topolsky. Agent Bering was one of the agents assigned to last month's sighting who had been completely unaware of the relevance of the evidence he'd collected and disdainful of her input, yet she was supposed to drop everything when he snapped his fingers. Agent Bering didn't have any friggin' idea what was going on out there and no interest in listening to someone who did, but he took precedence while she had to fight for the right to take a break.
"Sir, we're going to be late for the meeting," Pamela prompted with a sympathetic look at Topolsky.
"Yes, yes, I'm going," Stevens said crossly, heading for the elevator.
Topolsky watched the elevator door close behind him before removing Agent Samuels' card from her pocket.
"You know what?" she said softly. "So am I."
*****************************************************
"Well?" Pierce's voice demanded.
"She's interested," Brian reported, his phone to his ear as he walked rapidly down the street about a block from the field office. "Wary, but interested."
"Wary about what? You just offered her Washington. What more could she want?"
"She's loyal to the Bureau," Brian noted. "When I felt her out on the subject of the director wanting to shut us down, she didn't believe it. She thinks Freeh would never do that."
"Oh, of course she does," Pierce said disdainfully.
"In fairness, many of our recruits felt the same way," Brian said. "I shifted the blame to pencil pushers in Congress, and that she bought."
"Good."
"She's also loyal to Stevens," Brian went on. "She called him a 'good agent'."
"I can't believe I let you talk me into going after this airhead," Pierce complained. "Tell me again what she brings to the table except a modest rack and a decent pair of legs?"
"You know perfectly well what she brings to the table," Brian said patiently. "Information. She can tell us who to go after in Roswell better than anyone can. Hubble's death brought a couple of dozen agents to the party, but all the agents in the world are meaningless if we don't know what we're doing."
"I still say we can collect this information ourselves," Pierce argued.
"Not fast enough," Brian said. "Not quietly enough. No one can know we're there, Danny, and the longer we're there, the more likely someone will know. Going into Roswell with Kathleen Topolsky in our back pocket saves us one hell of a lot of time. With what she knows, we might be able to make this a surgical extraction, or damned close to it. We don't even have far to bring them; Eagle Rock's a stone's throw away."
"If she's loyal to the Bureau and Stevens, what makes you think she'll play ball?"
"Once we know what she knows, she won't have to," Brian said. "Look, she's in a crap job now, and she knows it. Bring her to Washington, butter her up, treat her like she's important, hang on her every word, and she'll eat it up. By the time she figures out where we're headed, if she objects—if she objects—it'll be too late to do anything about it."
"You'd better be right about that," Pierce said darkly. "I wouldn't be surprised if she blew you in just for having that conversation."
"Blew me in to whom?" Brian said innocently. "Blew me in for what? For telling her the Unit faces disbandment? Everyone knows that, or they should if they're paying attention. We just had a friendly conversation about the state of the Unit and our mutual desire to see it thrive, and if she remembers it differently...well...it's her word against mine."
"That's what I like about you, Brian," Pierce laughed. "Sometimes you're almost as devious as I am."
"Thank you," Brian smiled. "By the way, speaking of devious...were you ever going to mention that Summers hand-picked her?"
"Oh, she told you that, did she? Well, of course she did. Yeah, Summers recruited her. Call it a moment of weakness. He wanted to 'expand our horizons', or something like that."
"Summers was no fool," Brian noted. "He must have seen something in her."
"Sure he did. A 'C' cup and legs that go all the way up to there."
"Wow," Brian deadpanned. "Cynical, much?"
"I'm serious," Pierce insisted.
"Which is odd for someone who idolized Summers," Brian commented.
"I didn't idolize him," Pierce protested. "I had a great deal of respect for him, but even he had his weaknesses."
"Perhaps," Brian allowed. "Although choosing agents would not appear to be one of them."
"Everyone gets at least one clinker," Pierce said. "I'm just afraid she'll wind up mine. That's assuming she takes the bait, that is."
"She'll take it," Brian promised. "I'm sure of it."
******************************************************
Roswell Sheriff's Station
"Wait for me outside," Mrs. DeLuca said.
Michael gave the woman who had just saved his ass a tentative smile which she did not return, not that he blamed her. He'd followed Valenti up here like a man on his way to his own execution, desperately wishing she'd simply picked up the phone. God knows he did awkward, but this was too awkward even for him. This was the second time today he'd had to face her, although this time he had his pants on, no small relief. It was something of a miracle that she was here at all; granted he'd helped her out with that Alien Takedown bit, but after the way she'd freaked out this morning without even bothering to ask a single question, he was pretty certain that all the wrestling matches in the world wouldn't have dragged her down here to bail him out of jail, even if bail was set at her word. Whatever the reason for her largesse, this instant dismissal meant he didn't have to use the lame "thank you" speech he'd hastily thrown together on the way up here, and he slipped into the hallway, grateful to have avoided yet another scene...only to find himself alone with Maria. Out of the frying pan and into the fire.
"Hey," he said uncomfortably.
"Hey, yourself," Maria answered. She waited a painfully long moment before speaking again. "So...where do you think Hank is?"
"No clue," Michael said. "He was there when I left last night, and that's the God's honest truth."
"Of course it is," Maria said. "I believe you."
Her tone was quiet and reassuring, and Michael instantly felt guilty for getting defensive. "Listen, I...I really appreciate this," he went on, nodding toward the office door. "I know I didn't exactly give your mom a reason to help me. Although it might have been nice if she'd kept the screaming to a minimum and given me a chance to put my pants on."
Maria made a sound somewhere between a wince and a chuckle. "You blithering idiot," she said, shaking her head. "Why didn't you just tell Valenti where you were? I mean, it was really noble of you not to say anything, but jail? Jail is when you stop being noble."
"And what would have happened if I'd told him?" Michael asked. "He would have called your mom for verification, who would have said...what?"
"I'm not sure," Maria admitted. "Probably nothing good."
"Exactly. Besides, you know what he would have thought. We didn't do anything, but he would have thought we did. Just like she did."
"I told her we just slept," Maria said quickly. "I made that very clear."
"Yeah, and how'd that go over?" Michael asked.
Maria sighed and leaned against the wall. "Not well. Look, she was totally out of line. She just lost it, probably because I walked in on her and Valenti making out last night."
Michael raised an eyebrow. "Your mom and Valenti? You're kidding."
"I wish I were," Maria said darkly. "I can just imagine why he's developed a sudden interest in my mother, of all people."
"So that's why he believed her," Michael said. "Whatever. Works for me."
"I make no excuses for the way she acted this morning," Maria said. "But I got her to change her mind this afternoon."
"You did this?" Michael said. "How'd you pull that one off?"
"I begged," Maria admitted. "A lot. It's okay," she added when she saw the look on his face. "You didn't ask me to; I decided to. And it was worth it. The begging, her blowing up...all of it."
Michael looked away, suddenly self-conscious. If life as a non-human foster child had taught him anything, it was that it wasn't wise to become indebted to anyone or depend on anyone but yourself, and yet here he was, indebted all over again and to the same person, no less. Trouble was, all the alarms which normally went off in situations like these weren't going off this time. Trouble was, he kind of liked it.
"I didn't think you were going to let me in last night," he said suddenly.
"That's because I wasn't," Maria said. "I figured 'stone walls' would be just fine out in the rain."
"So why did you?"
Her eyes dropped. "Because I knew that if you were coming to me, something must be wrong. Really wrong. And based on what Isabel told me, I was right."
"Isabel," Michael muttered. "She told you."
"I made her," Maria said quickly. "She couldn't find you, and I wouldn't tell her I'd seen you until she told me why she was looking. What did he do to you, Michael?"
Michael kept his eyes on a crack on the opposite wall. "Not much. A black eye. Max fixed it."
" 'Not much'?" she repeated incredulously. "Michael, a black eye isn't 'not much'. A black eye is assault!"
"See, this is why I didn't want anyone to know," Michael said, "because I knew they'd feel sorry for me, and blow it all out of proportion, and make it sound worse than it really was."
"No it isn't," Maria insisted. "You didn't want anyone to know because you hate needing help, and you hate it because you're always afraid you're not going to get any."
Michael kept his eyes on the wall crack, marveling at the fact that he wasn't feeling angry. That statement should have pissed him off, but it didn't. She didn't sound angry, or accusatory, or even vaguely annoyed, just...sad. And worried. About him.
"Maybe," he allowed. "But there's another reason. Like I told Isabel, Hank's a jerk, but that was all I had. There aren't a lot of places for a kid my age to go, and I don't want to wind up in one of those homes. As long as I could handle it, as long as it wasn't too bad...well, let's just say it could get worse. A lot worse."
"Then we need to make certain that doesn't happen," Maria said firmly. "Isabel was talking about something her dad arranged, about a kid our age living on his own."
"Her dad hates me," Michael said. "He made that clear last night."
"I heard you weren't exactly a paragon of virtue yourself," Maria said dryly. "And I thought it was her mom who hated you."
"Her too."
"Really? Cause it didn't sound like it to me."
"Okay, so maybe she wasn't as bad as she usually is," Michael admitted, reflecting privately that Diane Evans had displayed none of her usual annoyance last night, had even been friendly. "And that was weird. I would rather she'd been her usually pissy self."
"Oh, right," Maria nodded. "Because that way you're the victim, and it's someone else's fault." She paused, waiting for that to sink in. "Michael, in some ways, you are a victim. But sometimes you make yourself a victim. You make it harder than it has to be."
"Yeah, well, you know what they say," Michael answered. "There's value in the preemptive strike."
"What does that mean?"
"It means it's easier for me to reject people before they have a chance to reject me."
He was staring at the floor now, the crack being uncomfortably level with her face...but that didn't stop him feeling the hand which slipped into his. "I didn't reject you," she said softly.
"Yeah, I...I know," Michael said, still carefully keeping his eyes averted. "And, a...thanks for letting me in. I didn't know where else to go, and...and I haven't slept that well in a long time. Maybe ever."
She took his face in her hands, raised it to hers. "Me neither," she smiled.
The door to Valenti's office opened abruptly. First out was Mrs. DeLuca, of course, whose eyes narrowed when she saw them.
"Mrs. DeLuca," Michael said before she could erupt. "I...appreciate you coming all the way down here, and...well...you know."
"Mmm hmm," she murmured skeptically.
"Where were you planning on staying, son?" Valenti asked him, ignoring the layer of frost building up on the woman beside him.
"At the trailer," Michael answered. "Where else?"
"Will you be all right there by yourself?"
"Sure," Michael shrugged. "I'm by myself a lot anyway. Hank'll show up eventually. Last time this happened, some cop from another town brought him back."
"You let me know the minute you see him," Valenti ordered as Mrs. DeLuca's eyes widened. "And I meant what I said earlier. I'll see to it that they find you another—"
" 'Situation'," Michael finished. "Yeah. You mentioned that."
"Uh...we should be going," Mrs. DeLuca said, gazing at him curiously.
"I'll walk you out, Amy," Valenti smiled.
They walked away, Maria bringing up the rear, but not before mouthing Amy? and sticking her fingers down her throat. Michael waited until he could be certain they'd left the building before going downstairs. Three encounters with Maria's mother in one day was too many.
"Michael!" Isabel exclaimed when she caught sight of him. "What happened? Maria and her mom just left, but she couldn't talk because her mother rushed her out of here—"
"Slow down, Isabel," Max broke in. "Give him a minute."
Isabel blinked. "Right. Right, I was just...I mean, we were just worried."
"So what happened?" Max asked.
So much for a minute, Michael thought. "Hank's gone, don't know where. Valenti thought I knew something about it, but I don't. End of story."
"But why didn't you tell him where you were?" Isabel protested. "And why were you with her, anyway? Why didn't you come to us?"
"Do I really need to answer that? Isabel...not here," Michael added, pushing past her when she opened her mouth. "Let's go. I've seen enough of the Sheriff's Station to last me a lifetime."
*****************************************************
"So it looks like we just got unlucky," Brivari said. "God knows much worse has happened in that trailer park and no one reported it, so we certainly didn't expect anyone to report anything this time."
"And no one did," Dee's voice said over the phone. "The residents there probably see enough of the police. If that gun hadn't gone off, that motorist wouldn't have heard it and called it in."
"It would appear Valenti's concern stemmed from the fact that Rath wouldn't tell him where he spent the night," Brivari went on. "Once that was settled, he let him go.
"I wish he'd come here," Dee said sadly, "but I imagine my house is too far away, especially on foot in the rain."
"Valenti apparently told Rath he'd contact Social Services for him," Brivari said. "How much time do we have?"
"Not much," Dee said. "Michael's a minor, which means they'll have to act quickly. Someone isn't officially missing until forty-eight hours have passed, so they'll probably wait that long, but no longer."
"Damn it," Brivari muttered. "I could strangle whoever made that call. If not for that, we could have arranged to have Hank missing for weeks with none the wiser."
"Or none that mattered," Dee added. "But I'm afraid that ship has sailed. I told Isabel as much when she asked me again to intervene with Philip on Michael's behalf. I told her I'd love to, but Michael had to cooperate. Even she knew that wasn't likely to happen. She's afraid he'll leave town."
"Rath?" Brivari said. "Leave his king? Unlikely. If he...wait. That's my other line. I'll call you back."
Brivari rung off with Dee and connected his other line. "Jaddo? Where are you?"
"At the trailer," Jaddo's voice said, heavy with concern. "He's...he's leaving, Brivari."
"Jesus," Brivari muttered, "I always said she was a weather vane, but this is ridiculous. Dee just told me Vilandra was worried Rath would leave town, and I thought she was nuts."
"Would that she were," Jaddo said. "Zan was here, and he tried to stop him, but..."
"Well, go get him," Brivari said impatiently. "We can't very well have the King's Second wandering around God knows where."
"This isn't like him," Jaddo said worriedly. "He doesn't just give up like this. Soldiers don't simply walk away from a fight."
"Of course they do," Brivari said. "It's called 'retreat'. He's retreating from the near certainty that he'll wind up in an institution, but there's already a fix for that, this emancipation Dee's been talking about. But he'll have to ask for help and be willing to accept it."
"He was never good at accepting help," Jaddo admitted, "although he would when he had to. This definitely meets the criteria for 'have to'."
"He's not himself, Jaddo," Brivari reminded him. "At the moment he's still a child, a proud, stubborn, frightened child. Go get him and bring him back. Reveal yourself if you have to. This is that important."
"I'd rather not," Jaddo said, sounding genuinely troubled. "Given his behavior, he's not ready to know."
"Then get him back here some other way," Brivari said. "I'm sure you'll think of something."
"It's not that simple," Jaddo protested. "If I bring him back, what's to stop him from leaving tomorrow? He needs to not only come back, he needs to fix the problem. He needs to go to Zan's guardian and accept his help, and I...I don't know how to make that happen. You're much better at this than I am. Could I...could you..."
His voice trailed off, and Brivari sighed heavily. Like Ward, like Warder; if Rath had difficulty asking for help, his Warder wasn't much better.
"I'll bring him back," Brivari promised. "One way or another."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Vacation starts next week, so I'll post Chapter 79 on Sunday, July 8.
