CHAPTER 18 Code Word Girl Talk
Code Word: Girl Talk
Brooke and I got ice cream at a shop down the street from the firm and then set up camp on a bench outside the shopping center. Along the way, we also stopped at a few stores, just for good measure, and our packages were spread out on the ground near our feet.
“So what now?” I asked Brooke.
She pulled her feet up and folded them gracefully under her body. “Now we talk.” She took in my skeptical look. “Trust me. It’s something girls do.”
So that was our cover. We weren’t cheerleaders. We were just girls. I maneuvered to get myself comfortable, until I was sitting cross-legged on the bench, my ice cream balanced precariously on one knee. “And what do girls talk about?” I asked.
“Boys. Other girls. World domination.”
I was about eighty percent sure she was kidding on that last one, but this was Brooke, who dominated our high school world with seemingly little effort, so I wasn’t willing to completely discount the possibility that she might be serious.
“Which other girls?” That one seemed the safest.
“Whichever ones are pissing us off.” Brooke didn’t sugarcoat it.
“And if no one is?”
Brooke rolled her eyes. “Then you’re lying.”
“Are you trying to say I’m an angry person?”
“Well, yes. But it wouldn’t matter if you weren’t. This is high school. Everybody’s mad at somebody.”
“So who are you mad at?” I asked.
Brooke shrugged. “Chloe for being a brat. Zee for analyzing what’s none of her business. You for almost getting blown up.”
“So, as girls, we’re supposed to sit here talking about how you don’t like me?”
Brooke rolled her eyes. “Technically, we’re supposed to talk about the people who aren’t here.”
Brooke’s phone beeped, and she flipped it open to read a text message. Then she dug into her purse and pulled out an iPod. I stared at it warily, unsure whether this was the communicator iPod that Chloe had given us, or the one that doubled as a high-voltage Taser.
Brooke put one of the earpieces in her ear, and I came to the conclusion that as painful as sitting here with me obviously was for her, she probably wasn’t frustrated enough to resort to Tasering herself. Yet.
“What’s up?” I asked her.
“Just a song I like,” she said lightly, and I got the message.
She was coordinating the tails on the TCIs, but she wasn’t going to give any verbal indication of what she was doing—not even to me.
Considering we were only twenty yards away from the institution our Squad was designed to combat, I couldn’t chalk that one up to anything but common sense, as much as I would have liked to blame it on Brooke’s more PMSy tendencies.
Her fingers flew across the keypad of her cell phone at high speed, and I wondered what kind of orders she was dishing out.
Given an infinite amount of time and all of the technology in Chloe’s lab, I might have been able to figure it out, the same way that a hundred monkeys could eventually produce the works of Shakespeare, but I didn’t have that kind of time, or the technology, or the monkeys, so I settled for taking another bite of ice cream and watching the parking garage across the street.
Trying to appear as though I were gazing vacuously off into space, I zeroed in on a car that was preparing to turn into the Peyton parking garage.
I brought my free hand up to the simple chain at my neck and fiddled with the charm.
An almost inaudible click told me that my necklace, which was actually a high-definition digital camera, had taken a picture that might have been of my collarbone, but that I hoped was of the car across the street.
I glanced over at Brooke and saw that her dark hair was tucked behind her left ear, clearing the way for a clean shot by the video camera installed in her earrings.
Between the two of us, we were wearing more or less an entire Radio Shack, and thanks to Lucy, I had a puppy sticker in my pocket that, if applied to a person’s bare skin, would render them unconscious in less than a second.
“Come on, Toby. There must be someone you don’t like.” Brooke was back to making conversation. It seemed like the most natural thing in the world coming from her, like she didn’t normally roll her eyes at me eight million times a day. And that was when I realized something.
Brooke and I weren’t hanging out. Brooke’s cover was hanging out with my cover.
We were supposed to be friends, just two girls chilling on a bench, eating ice cream and talking about boys and shopping and the girls on our metaphorical hit lists.
So that’s what Brooke was doing, and she was doing it well.
Two could play that game.
“Hayley Hoffman,” I said. “Her JV mafia. Chip. Mr. Corkin.” I decided to stop listing people, lest I appear to be the angry girl she already viewed me as.
“Hayley’s not that bad,” Brooke said.
“If by ‘not that bad,’ you mean ‘unholy spawn of evil,’ then, yeah.”
“I mean, yes, she’s kind of a bitch, but there are worse things to be. She wants things, and she goes after them. People follow her.”
“So tell me. Are we talking about you or Hayley?”
Brooke snorted. “You’ve been spending way too much time with Zee. And we’re talking about Hayley. If we were talking about me, we’d be using words like fabulous.”
Even as we talked, Brooke’s fingers raced across her keypad. She had an uncanny ability to text without looking, and to carry on a conversation with me, whilst listening to reports from the other four teams, issuing orders, and keeping an eye on Peyton, all at once.
Personally, I was struggling with eating ice cream and watching the building across the street.
“Get your phone.”
It took me a second to realize that Brooke was talking to me, even though there wasn’t anyone else around. I dug my phone out of my purse.
“You know that guy you like?” she prodded.
Jack? My mind went there before I could stop it.
“That guy,” Brooke said again, and I followed her gaze to a guy across the street.
She glanced just briefly down at my necklace, and I got the picture.
With another absentminded fiddle, I’d captured his image, and a few keystrokes to my cell phone allowed me to download the pictures without ever connecting the two.
Chloe may have been a brat, but she was darn good at her job.
Once the picture had loaded on my phone, Brooke grabbed it out of my hand and passed me hers. While she keyed in the access code for comparing the picture to the Big Guys’ watch list database, I scrolled through the last few messages she’d sent to the teams.
Team A was at Walford Park with Anthony Connors-Wright.
They’d followed orders and kept from engaging, and were currently monitoring him from four different viewpoints.
Chloe wanted permission to go in closer, but Brooke had denied the request. No engagement meant no engagement, not even minor physical contact.
Nobody on the Squad was so much as going to brush up against a TCI on Brooke’s watch, and her text messages made that abundantly clear in a manner suited to an alpha female.
Team B was following Amelia Juarez in two different cars, careful to keep the tails as subtle as they could.
On Brooke’s orders, the girls fell back a mile and followed the tracker we’d planted on the car rather than the car itself.
Brooke had notified the Big Guys’ of her decision, and they’d approved.
From the way Brooke was playing things, you would have thought No Engagement meant No Risks. For someone who made the rules at our high school, she was awfully hesitant about breaking them elsewhere.
“I don’t think you guys are a very good match,” Brooke said, handing my phone back. It took me a second to read the meaning in her words: the guy I’d photographed didn’t match anyone in the Big Guys’ database.
Soon thereafter, I confirmed something they don’t tell you in spy movies.
Recon is boring. So boring, in fact, that I might have actually preferred to be doing toe touches.
Brooke and I sat there for hours, repeating the same motions over and over again, thinking of new ways to make them look natural.
We rotated locations, going from the bench, inside a lingerie store (near the window, of course), then down the street on the other side, and finally, we ended up back on the bench, eating Chinese food for dinner.
From what I’d been able to glean from Brooke, none of the other teams had noticed anything sketchy, either.
Anthony Connors-Wright was still wandering around the park, which might have been a sign of mental instability, since the park wasn’t exactly a hot spot of activity, but probably wasn’t a sign of nefarious activity.
He hadn’t actually talked to anyone, other than a hot-dog vendor whose background check had turned out clean when the girls ran his picture through the database.
Amelia Juarez had spent most of the night shopping, which meant that our second team had been able to camouflage themselves without much effort at all.
Given the fact that the girls knew the closest mall inside and out (including all of the potential hand-off locations), they felt that they could say with high levels of certainty that Amelia wasn’t up to much other than biding her time.
My mind began to construct scenarios, as Brooke and I sat there, talking about nothing over chow mein, just to keep up the appearance of talking. We’d downgraded to talking about celebrities (most of whom I knew absolutely nothing about), their hairstyles, and their misguided relationships.
Of the scenarios I’d managed to construct, Scenario one went a little something like this: Peyton, Kaufman, and Gray wasn’t at all involved in this biological-weapons scare.
Since Jacob Kann was dead and Hector Hassan was in custody, that just left Amelia and Anthony, both of whom were waiting on a call from the biological-arms dealer before moving forward with their plans, whatever those might be.