Meeting Agent Kane
Linda Kane was in her early forties, with the kind of sharp-eyed intensity that came from years of chasing criminals who thought they were smarter than the law. She met Shane and Marcus at a coffee shop in neutral territory, sitting in a back corner booth where they could talk without being overheard.
Shane laid out what they had—financial evidence of money laundering, the names of corrupt officials on Royce’s payroll, and most importantly, three potential witnesses who could provide testimony that would make a RICO case airtight.
Kane listened without interrupting, her expression growing more interested with each revelation. When Shane finished, she sat back and studied him carefully.
“You understand that what you’re describing is essentially running a parallel investigation outside official channels,” she said. “I can’t officially sanction that, can’t protect you if things go wrong, and can’t guarantee that any evidence you gather will be admissible in court.”
“I understand,” Shane said.
“But unofficially,” Kane continued, a slight smile tugging at the corner of her mouth, “if someone were to provide me with actionable intelligence that allowed me to build a case I’ve been trying to make for three years, I’d be inclined to move very quickly on that information. And if that same person happened to be in a dangerous situation that my investigation could help resolve, well, I’d consider that a happy coincidence.”
“So you’re in?” Marcus asked.
“I’m interested,” Kane replied carefully. “Show me what you’ve got, and if it’s as good as you say, I’ll have warrant requests drafted and ready to go within twenty-four hours. But Mr. Jones, you need to understand something—Royce Clark is smart, connected, and ruthless. If he figures out you’re behind this before we can move, you’re going to be in serious danger. These people don’t call lawyers when they have problems. They call people who make problems disappear.”
“I know,” Shane said. “But my daughter—”
“Is worth the risk,” Kane finished. “I get it. I have a daughter too. If someone hurt her…” She trailed off, but her expression said everything Shane needed to know. She understood. She’d do the same thing in his position.
They spent another hour going over the details, with Sarah Chen presenting the financial evidence and James Rodriguez explaining how they’d identified and could approach the three potential witnesses. By the end of the meeting, Kane was genuinely excited about what they’d built.
“This is good work,” she said as they prepared to leave. “Really good work. If everything checks out the way you say it will, I can have warrants executed within forty-eight hours of your signal. Just make sure you’re somewhere safe when things go down, because Royce is going to know someone betrayed him, and he’s going to be looking for revenge.”
Shane and Marcus left the coffee shop with a plan in motion and a federal law enforcement partner who was ready to move when the time came. Phase One was complete. It was time to move to Phase Two—chaos and disruption that would crack Royce’s organization open like an egg.