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Mercy (Atlee Pine #4)(94)

Author:David Baldacci

“My God, Agent Pine, you haven’t seen her in thirty years. She wouldn’t recognize you, either.”

“But we’re twins, Carol. Damnit, you’d think I would have—”

“What? Felt a tingling sensation? That’s not how it works, Agent Pine. It was amazing luck she was staying at the same hotel. And it was just bad luck you didn’t recognize her. There was nothing you could have done.”

Pine went to stand over by the window and looked out. She had a sudden thought.

“They don’t have valet service here, only self-park, but they might have a security camera.”

They rushed back to the front desk where the same young man was standing. He started scowling as Pine approached him. He ducked into the room behind the desk and thirty seconds later, an older woman came out also carrying a scowl and a defensive posture.

“Can I help you?” she said stiffly.

Pine pulled out her shield. “I’m with the FBI. I need to know if you have video surveillance of the parking lot.”

“Why do you need to know that?”

“Because I am trying to track down a guest who is staying here. She’s not in her room. She might have recently left the hotel. I need to see if her car or her image is on the film.”

“Do you have a warrant?”

“Why do I need a warrant?” asked Pine. “I’m not asking to search anyone’s room.”

“You’ve apparently already done that, or so my associate told me. Video surveillance is a form of searching. It invades someone’s privacy, not only the person you say you’re looking for, but our other guests as well. So, no warrant, no security tape.”

“You sound like a lawyer,” said Pine, who was impressed with the woman’s argument, despite her frustration with her answer.

“For twenty years I was a paralegal to one of the best criminal defense attorneys in the state.”

“Why are you working here, then?”

“If you must know, he died and I lost my job, and I’m apparently too old and too expensive to be employed as a paralegal anymore,” she said bitterly.

Blum said, “Well, clearly those people are wrong and stupid.”

The supervisor looked at Blum. “Are you with the FBI, too?”

“I am.”

Now the supervisor looked impressed. Pine could almost see the woman’s brain percolating.

“Well, that’s . . . progress.”

Blum smiled knowingly. “Yes, it is. But a lot more progress needs to be done. I think we both know that.”

The woman eyed her for a long moment, before she glanced at Pine. “But I’m still afraid I can’t do what you want without the proper legal process.”

Pine’s features calmed and she rested her elbows on the counter and looked at the woman, her expression one of desperation mingled with mental exhaustion. “Would it make a difference if I told you the woman in question is my twin sister? And that I haven’t seen her since we were six and she was kidnapped from our home in Georgia?”

The woman took a step back and gave each of them a searching glance. “Is that really the case?”

“I would never make something like that up.” Using Blum’s phone because she had left hers in her room, Pine showed the woman the image of Mercy from the FBI PSA. “This is my sister at the exact moment when she broke free from years as a captive in a living hell. Now, I believe she’s in this hotel. I’ve never been this close to her in thirty years.” Pine handed the phone back to Blum and said pleadingly, “Will you please help me? If I have to wait for a warrant, she’ll be long gone. This may be my only shot.”

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