"Is it an animal?"
"Nope," I replied, idly picking at the cuticle on my ring finger as I sat in the driver's seat of my Roadster in the parking lot of the Sunshine Inn in North Hollywood.
"Vegetable?" the woman in my passenger seat asked. Samantha Cross. She was tall and lean with mocha skin and dark doe eyes that she was currently adding an extra layer of eyeliner to, creating a smoky effect that was pretty impressive considering the only light she was working with came from the blinking neon sign to our left touting No vacancies and Free Wi_i. (Their f was busted.) Sam had the style of Foxy Brown, the sass of Beyonce, and the aim of Dirty Harry. While Sam was technically my employee, she was the closest thing I had to a best friend, which at least made the cramped car bearable.
"Not a vegetable," I told her. I stretched my arms up above my head, skimming the ragtop roof of the car and stifling a yawn.
"Okay then tell me this—can I see it right now?" Her eyes went out the windshield, taking in the two-story motor inn in front of us. The name was deceptive, as there was nothing sunny about its appearance. The paint was peeling, the pool was a murky green color, and the rates were charged by the hour and usually paid in cash. The Beverly Hilton, this was not. Then again, for North Hollywood, it was par for the course.
"Yes, you can see it from here."
"Is it smaller than my—wait, is that him?" Sam sat forward in her seat, squinting through the night as a short, portly guy in boxers and a tank top emerged from one of the rooms, ice bucket in hand.
I gave him a quick glance. "No." I tamped down the flutter of anticipation. "I think he came from 105."
Sam made a disgusted sound and sat back in her seat. "Could this guy just do it already? I'm dying of boredom."
We'd been waiting for Igor Plotnikov to come out of room 103 with his mistress for the last three hours. Which was actually kind of impressive. I'd originally pegged Igor as a fifteen minutes kind of guy.
The Starbucks Sam and I had bought on the way over had long since been consumed, the dregs now cold. Sam had caught me up-to-date on all the cases currently under contract with the agency—which hadn't taken long since Igor was only one of two still unresolved. We'd already both counted out six degrees of separation from the president, debated whether the streak of light in the sky was a shooting star or a jumbo jet leaving LAX, and we'd finally resorted to twenty questions to pass the stretching time.
"We just need one picture of them together," I said, unable to keep the yawn at bay this time. Mrs. Irina Plotnikov had found the matchbook to the Sunshine Inn in her husband's pants pocket and put together where he really was every Saturday when he said he'd been playing durak with the boys. While the matchbook was a good clue, Irina's lawyer had said photos would go a long way toward getting her their beach house once she filed for divorce. So, she'd done what every reasonable wife in LA did when suspecting their husband of stepping out on them—she'd called the Bond Agency.
Namely, me. My name was Bond. James Bond.
Yeah, I know…trust me, I was not the person who picked that name out. The blame for that cruel and unusual punishment lay squarely on the shoulders of my father, Derek Bond. Hoping for a bouncing baby boy, he'd insisted on the name, thinking it was some sort of cool tribute to his childhood hero. In reality, he was the only person who called me James. Well, the only one who called me that and lived. Ever since I'd been old enough to voice an opinion, I'd gone by Jamie.
In addition to the name, my father had also given me his other legacy—the Bond Agency, a small PI firm in Los Angeles specializing in what we liked to call domestic espionage. Or catching cheating husbands. I'd spent more childhood nights than I cared to count falling asleep in the back of my father's Bonneville while on stakeouts at cheesy motels very much like the one I was currently sitting in front of. When Derek had been injured in the line of duty, he'd reluctantly passed the reins of the business on to me. And while it might not have been my first career choice, I'd grown into the role. Even if moments like this did remind me of my childhood and why Derek Bond would never win father of the year.
I shifted in my seat, wiggling some feeling back into my left foot, which was starting to grow pins and needles.
"How much is the wife paying us?" Sam asked, finishing the smoky eyes and moving on to refreshing her lipstick.
"Not enough," I mumbled, slipping the red pump off my foot and massaging some sensation back into it.
"Then tell me why we're doing this?"
"Because business is slow and we need the money," I told her frankly.
Sam paused, lipstick hovering over her bottom lip. "How slow?" she asked with a frown.
Usually I didn't bother my girls with the financial end of things. And, truth be told, the last couple of years had been good for us, bringing in enough profit to pay the bills, upgrade our computer systems, and even tuck away a little extra for a rainy day. But then the pandemic shutdown had hit, everything had closed down, and the cases had stopped coming in. While husbands and wives everywhere had been cooped up with each other long enough to triple the divorce rate, very few had been slipping out the back door to cavort with the opposite sex on the sly. Even though the world was cautiously getting back to something like normal now, it was still making for a very slow season for adultery. Slow enough that our rainy day fund had been wiped out several monsoons ago.
"Don't worry," I told her with false optimism. "I'm sure business will pick up in the spring. Warm weather always makes people frisky."
"Hmm." Sam didn't sound convinced. "Well, I wish Igor would hurry up and get frisky." She puckered her lips in the mirror, blotting red lipstick with a tissue.
"You have somewhere to be tonight?" I asked, noticing for the first time that her dangling earrings and leather jacket did seem a little put together for an evening sitting in NoHo counting bottles of beer on the wall.
She gave me a coy look. "Maybe."
I raised one eyebrow. "Maybe? Is this maybe a date?"
Sam scoffed and shook her head. "Hardly. Junior's bowling with his dad. I said I'd join them if I got off early enough."
Julio Jr. was Sam's twelve-year-old son, and Julio Sr. was the baby-daddy who had knocked Sam up, ruined her modeling career with stretch marks, and promptly taken off. Sam had been a struggling single mom when I'd hired her, though recently Julio had come back into the picture, paying up on child support and spending more time with his son.
And, I noticed, more time with Sam too.
"Didn't you guys just go mini golfing together last week?" I asked.
She nodded. "We did." She paused. "And I know what you're thinking."
I grinned. "I'm thinking that's a lot of smoky eye to impress your twelve-year-old."
Sam gave me a playful smack in the arm. "Okay, okay, yes. Julio and I have been spending more time together lately. But this"—she gestured to her face—"is not to impress anyone."
"No?"
"No. It's to keep the goodwill coming. Did I tell you Julio showed up at my place with a steak dinner last week?"
I shook my head.
"Yeah, and he paid for Junior's little league season coming up, and he bought me these earrings for Christmas, and he even offered to get my transmission fixed on my car."
"Sounds like he's really stepping up," I noted.
Sam shrugged. "Hey, if Julio wants to make up for lost time by showering me with gifts, I'm not gonna stop him."
I smirked. "Work it, girl."
"Trust me, I will." She paused. "So, what was it?"
"It?" I asked around another yawn. I must be getting old. It was only eight. Or maybe boredom was aging me.
"Not animal, vegetable, and where I can see it. I give up. What is it?"
I pointed across the parking lot. "Ice machine."
"Ah." She nodded. "That was my next guess."
"Look, if you want to go meet up with Julio, I can watch this place alone—" I started, prepared to take one for the team.
But I didn't get to finish as Sam grabbed my arm. "103! The door just opened."
She was right. I watched as a redhead in thigh high boots and a tiny tube dress emerged from the room, giggling and grinning. Right behind her was the large, bulky frame of Igor Plotnikov. He was wearing a bathrobe, loosely knotted around his ample middle. He had thick dark hair, beady dark eyes, and a wickedly dark smile on his face as he gave Boots the up and down. Even from across the parking lot, the look suddenly made me feel like I needed a shower.
I grabbed my camera, zooming in as far as my expensive lens would allow out my open window as I trained the view on Igor and Boots. I watched him mumble something in her ear—more giggling on her part—then she leaned forward and planted her lips on his.
Bingo.
I popped off a series of shots that would make Irina Plotnikov's lawyer do a celebratory cossack.
"Did you get that?" Sam asked excitedly in the seat beside me.
"Oh yeah," I told her, the camera still at my eye as I watched the amorous couple. Boots pulled back and winked at Igor. Then he watched her walk away with a slightly glassy look in his eyes.
That is, until his gaze roved the parking lot and settled on me.
And my camera.
Pointed at him.
"You!" He stabbed one hairy finger in my direction, and I immediately dropped the camera into my lap.
Uh-oh. Time to go.
"I think he spotted us," Sam said unnecessarily as I handed her the camera and turned the car on.
"I think so too. Let's get out of here."
Only, for a big guy, Igor was surprisingly fast. In seconds flat he was across the lot, his bathrobe flapping against his sides, revealing a whole lot of hairy naked skin.
I tried to avert my eyes as I put the car into reverse.
"Who are you?" Igor yelled, bearing down on us. "Why you taking pictures? My wife send you?"
I backed out of the parking space. But as I switched gears to pull forward, a pickup darted out from nowhere, and I had to slam on the brakes to avoid it.
"Jamie!" Sam said, a note of urgency in her voice as the hairy Russian caught up to us. He slammed one gigantic fist down on my hood, and I cringed, praying it didn't dent.
"You spying on me?!" he shouted.
Yeah, kinda.
"I'll kill you!" he threatened, standing in front of my car, banging the other fist down for emphasis.
At the very least, he was killing my paint job. I quickly put the car in reverse again, spinning around to check behind me before stomping down on the gas, sending us rocketing backwards through the parking lot.
Igor stumbled forward at the sudden shift in weight.
"Hurry, hurry," Sam chanted beside me, her eyes on the guy as he caught his balance again and started running after us, his bathrobe flying behind him like some sort of cape.
I hurried, making it all the way out of the lot and onto the street, where a Prius laid on its horn as I backed into traffic.
I waved an apology, changed gears, and merged over a lane.
Just as Igor came running out into the street.
"I kill you! I kill you, you hear!" he yelled, punctuating that last statement with a string of Russian insults that were lost to the night as I surged into traffic.
"Well, that was fun," Sam breathed, leaning her head back on the seat with a sigh.
I nodded my agreement. "Let's just hope normal people start cheating again soon."
* * *
The next morning, armed with my briefcase in one hand and a caramel macchiato in the other, I pushed through the etched glass doors of the Bond Agency.
As mentioned, as a child I'd never had any aspirations of being a PI. In fact, after a lifetime of watching Derek work, I'd wanted to get as far away from the seedier side of human nature as possible. As a teen I'd yearned for the glitz and glamour the world could offer and found my way toward getting a taste of it as a teen model. I'd been discovered at a mall one day by a talent agent who'd taken me out of the Valley and onto the runway.
I'd spent the bulk of my teens and twenties strutting down the catwalks of Paris, Milan, and New York, and while I'd never made supermodel status, I'd had enough of the taste of the good life that I'd been heartbroken when, at the age of twenty-six, I'd been deemed too old and unceremoniously dropped by my agent. With few options, I'd reluctantly come home to take over the family business.
Shortly afterward I'd hired on a small crew of other former models. While their looks often aided in catching cheating husbands with their boxers around their ankles, they'd also possessed hidden talents that made their brains much more of an asset to me than their beauty.
"Morning, boss," Maya Alexander said, rising from the reception desk to greet me. Maya was a former Playmate and PI in training who kept the agency running like a Swiss clock. Her slim frame was encased in a tasteful pencil skirt and low heels today, accentuated by a soft sweater that looked to be cashmere. Her long dark hair was pulled into a ponytail that swished behind her as she moved.
"Morning," I said, nodding her way. "What's on the agenda today?"
"Well," she said, grabbing her phone and scrolling as she followed me to my office. "Mrs. Duffy called last night."
"Oh?" I asked, hearing the note of hope in my voice. Mrs. Duffy's husband was a talent agent who she suspected was doing more than just casting the young starlets who came through his offices. "She ready to give us a retainer?"
Maya's frosted pink lips puckered into a frown. "No. Sorry. She said she decided to go with another PI firm."
"Rats." I tried to hide my disappointment behind my coffee cup as I sipped. "Any other good news?"
"Well, your accountant, Mr. Levine called. He said the fourth quarter losses don't look quite as bad as he'd feared."
I cocked my head at her. "You're sugarcoating that, aren't you?"
"A little," she admitted.
"Thanks." I dropped into my desk chair. "Anything else?"
"We did get a request for a new client meeting through the website." Maya sent me a hopeful smile. "A guy named Drake. Wants to come in at ten, but I wasn't sure you'd be ready by then."
I nodded, sipping from my cup again. "Absolutely. Tell him to come on in."
Maya's face brightened. "Great, I'll let him know." She turned to go. "Oh, and I almost forgot. There's a voicemail on the system from Aiden." She gave me a wink before shutting the door behind her.
Oh boy.
Aiden Prince was the Los Angeles County Assistant District Attorney, and our relationship was complicated at best. Aiden was tall, blond, tanned, and as close to physical perfection as you could get outside the pages of a GQ magazine. His suits were Brook Brothers, his aftershave was subtle, and his morals were unshakable. His wife had died of cancer a few years earlier, prompting him to leave his native Kansas City and start over on the West Coast, where he worked tirelessly bringing the bad guys of LA to justice.
Aiden and I had first met when I'd been a fugitive from the law and he'd been determined to track me down and turn me in. Somehow in the thrill of the chase, he'd realized I wasn't guilty and I'd realized he was more than just a handsome face. Mutual attraction had blossomed into mutual respect, and eventually the two had been much too enticing of a combo to keep us apart. While I had firsthand knowledge of whether he was a boxers or briefs man (silk boxers, in case you're interested), our relationship was still hovering in that indefinable area between sexy encounters and serious commitment.
I was personally fine with hovering, but I feared a commitment being forced soon. Aiden had said the L word to me recently, and it had been hanging in the air between us ever since, waiting for me to reciprocate. Aiden was great, and I wasn't quite sure what was holding me back from jumping in with both feet, but somehow I hadn't been able to force my mouth to form the word yet.
Though, an evening of lust was definitely still on the table.
I picked up my extension and keyed in my code to retrieve my voicemail. In addition to Aiden's, there were two earlier ones. One was a reminder from my landlord that rent on our office space was due last week. The other one was from my father Derek, first giving me some really unnecessary details of his latest colon checkup from his doctor and then an invitation to join him and his girlfriend, Elaine, for dinner that weekend. I made a mental note to call back as Aiden's voice came over the line.
"Hey, beautiful. Sorry I missed you."
I grinned, feeling warmth spread through my belly at the deep timbre of his tone.
"Thought maybe I'd swing by and we could catch a late dinner, but it sounds like you're not at the office. Call me tomorrow if you're in the mood. Until then, I'll be thinking of you."
When the beep told me the message was over, I barely resisted the urge to replay it. I set the lovely thought of calling Aiden later aside as I booted up my computer to get to work.
* * *
"Jamie?" Two hours later, Maya stuck her head in my office door. "Your ten o'clock is here. The website client?"
"Perfect," I told her, hitting ctrl S and saving the file I was working on. A detailed account of our evening at the Sunshine for Irina Plotnikov.
"Should I show him into the conference room?" Maya asked.
I nodded, rising from my chair. "And ask Sam and Caleigh to join us, would you?"
Maya nodded, slipping back out as I grabbed a yellow legal notepad and pen. I gave her a moment to get him settled, smoothing down any wrinkles in my burgundy blouse and throwing my black blazer over it. I'd paired it with dark jeans and tall black boots that went up to my knees, which gave the outfit just enough edge to be business with a kick. Then I exited my office, taking a right down the short hallway to where our small conference room sat, overlooking a view of the parking lot behind us and the roof of the KFC to our left. On a really clear day, you could just barely make out the shape of the oo's in the Hollywood sign between the two buildings to our right. On a really smoggy day, the scent of fried chicken and biscuits was overwhelming. Today the oo's were hidden and the eleven herbs and spices were making my stomach grumble.
In the center of the room was a polished wood table, and seated at the end of it was my potential client. I wasn't sure what I'd expected from the scant details Maya had gotten from our website contact form, but what greeted me stopped me in my tracks.
Slumped in a tall chair was an older man dressed all in black, from his shaggy black hair sticking out in frizzy tufts, to the black shirt with a black leather vest over the top of it, to the black jeans and black motorcycle books on his feet. Even his fingernails were painted black, and his eyes were rimmed in black eyeliner, making them look dark and saggy. From the loose jowls at the side of his face and stooped hunch to his posture, I put his age somewhere in the AARP range, despite his rock 'n' roll attire. If Ozzy Osbourne had a skinnier American cousin, I was looking right at him.
As I walked into the room, the man raised one hand, four of the five fingers encircled by large silver rings with skulls on them. "Hey, man."
"Uh, hey." I cleared my throat. "I mean, hi. I'm Jamie Bond."
He shrugged. "Cool. I was expecting a dude."
"Well, you got me," I said, pulling out a chair and sitting opposite him as I regained my professional composure. "Maya said your name is Drake?"
"Drake Deadly."
I paused. "Drake…Deadly?"
Drake opened his mouth and cackled, sounding a lot like a Disney villain. "I take it you're not a Deadly Devils fan?"
"Deadly Devils…the band?" I asked, the name ringing some faint bells. I seemed to remember my father listening to them years ago. Back in the MTV days, when big hair and guitar solos reigned supreme.
Drake nodded. "You have heard of us."
I licked my lips, not wanting to wound the ego of a potential client. "Of course." I smiled. "My dad's a fan."
"Oh yeah?" He raised one eyebrow at me, the gesture creating a network of wrinkles in his pale forehead. "Well, I'll have to give you an autograph for him."
I had high hopes his autograph would be on a retainer check, but I just smiled and nodded. "So, what can I help you with, Mr., uh, Deadly?"
He cackled again. "Call me Drake, man. I ain't formal."
"Sure. Drake. So, how can I help you?"
But that was as far as I got before a high-pitched squeal came from the doorway. "Ohmigosh, you're Drake Deadly!"
I swiveled in my seat to see Sam and my other employee, Caleigh Presley, come into the room. The squeal having come from Caleigh, who rushed forward to greet our potential client.
"Wow, I am such a fan!" she gushed. She grabbed one of Drake's ringed hands in hers and pumped it up and down so hard that I feared the man's arm might crack right off. "Caleigh Presley," she told him. "Of the Memphis Presleys. Ohmigosh, it's such an honor to meet you. My older brother had all your music back in the day. I think I even lost my virginity to your 'Jugs & Gin.'"
Drake got a dreamy look on his face. "Wish I'd been there."
"Uh, these are my associates. Caleigh Presley," I said, indicating the bubbly blonde as I steered her to a seat farther down the table. "And this is Samantha Cross."
Sam gave a discreet wave, sitting opposite me.
Drake gave her a healthy up and down. "Wow. This place is fulla hotties, huh?"
I bit my tongue, giving him a wan smile instead of the several feminist replies running through my head. "Was there something you thought we could help you with?" I asked the man.
Drake tore his eyes from Caleigh's low-cut blouse to meet mine. "What?"
"The reason you contacted us?" I prompted.
"Right, right." He nodded, as if suddenly remembering where he was. "Yeah, man, I do think you can help me. You like, follow people, right?"
I nodded slowly. "We do. If the investigation warrants it."
"Well, this one warrants it. I want you to follow my wife."
Now we were getting somewhere. "Do you suspect your wife has been unfaithful to you?" I asked, pen hovering over my legal pad.
"She told me she wants a divorce," he said slowly, eyes on the table. "And I want to know if there's someone else."
"You're married to Jenna James, right?" Caleigh piped up.
He nodded. "That's right."
"Jenna James?" I asked, sending Caleigh a questioning gaze. She was clearly more up on aging rock star culture than I was.
"She's a dancer," Caleigh explained.
"Was," Drake corrected. "Quit when we got married."
Caleigh nodded. "But she used to be a backup dancer for J.Lo, though, right?"
Drake nodded. "That's how we met. She was performing at the VMAs. I was getting a lifetime achievement award, and she was doing some sort of twerking thing." He grinned, eyes getting a far-off look, as if reliving the romantic moment.
"So, I'm guessing Jenna is a bit on the younger side?" I asked, getting a clearer picture of the dynamic.
Drake laughed again, years of smoking who-knows-what crackling in the back of his throat. "She ain't a bit younger. She's a lot younger. Twenty years. And hot. Stacked." He put his hands out in front of his chest as if to illustrate.
"I see." I discreetly wrote down trophy wife on my legal pad. "And she told you she's seeking a divorce?"
His eyes narrowed. "That's right. Talk about ungrateful. I've given her everything. Cars, jewelry. Even upgraded her a couple of cup sizes."
Some girls had all the luck. "Uh, how long have you been married?" I asked.
"Five years," he said, his eyes going to a spot on the floor. "She couldn't get me to the altar fast enough. Did the Vegas thing just a few weeks after we met."
I added possible gold digger to my notes. "Any kids?"
Drake shook his head vigorously. "No way. I been shooting blanks long before I met Jenna." He grinned. "Thankfully! Or, lemme tell you, there'd be a whole lotta little Drakes running around out there, if you know what I mean?" He waggled his eyebrows and stuck his tongue out in what I assumed was supposed to be some sort of sexual gesture. In reality, it just made me nervous he was going to drool on my conference table.
"Uh, okay, so what makes you think Jenna has been unfaithful?" I asked.
Drake put his tongue away. "What do you mean?"
"I mean, has she been secretive? Taking private calls? Hiding her activities from you?"
"Yeah." He gave me a blank look. "Sure. Maybe."
I shot a look to Sam, wondering if our potential client was high. He seemed to be having as hard a time focusing as I was having taking his dyed hair and elderly guyliner seriously.
"Look, I just want you to follow Jenna, okay?" Drake said, leaning his elbows on the table. "Tell me who she sees, where she goes. Everything."
His meaning was starting to sink in. "Did you have Jenna sign a prenup before you married?" I asked.
"Of course. I ain't stupid."
"Mind if I ask the terms?"
Drake's eyes went around the table before he answered. "Standard. Anything I came into the marriage with is mine. We split ways, she only gets alimony on what I made while we were together."
"In dollars and cents, how much are we talking?" I asked. The man in front of me had has-been stamped all over him, but if he'd been that popular once, royalties could still be coming in.
Drake's eyes did more pinging around the room, as if he were trying to gauge whether he should try to impress us or play his cards close to his vest. Apparently ego must have won out, as he answered, "Maybe a million."
I heard Sam do a low whistle beside me.
"A million in alimony?" Caleigh clarified. I could see her mental wheels turning, going down the same path mine had started on at Drake's lack of conviction in his wife's extramarital affairs.
"So, I'm guessing this prenup has an infidelity clause?" I said, eyes cutting to my associates. "Meaning, you offer proof she's been unfaithful, and you avoid paying that alimony."
Drake grinned. "That would be nice."
I pursed my lips, wondering if there actually was someone else in the trophy wife's life or if Drake was just fishing.
"Look, just follow her, okay?" he said, clearly picking up on my hesitation. "Just…tell me everything she does, everyone she sees." He pulled a piece of paper from his pocket, sliding it across the table toward me. "Our address. Make and model of her car. Some places I know she goes a lot."
I glanced down at the paper, surprised to see the very organized-looking list in neat handwriting. "Does your wife work?" I asked, scanning the list of places she frequented. It appeared to be largely nail salons, estheticians, and clothing boutiques.
Drake scoffed. "No. Like I said, she quit dancing when we met. Her only job for the last five years has been spending my money." The resentment in his tone was unmistakable.
"What's this?" I asked, stabbing my finger at an event it appeared the wife was due at that evening. "AAA? Is this a substance abuse program?"
Drake's cackle cut through the air again. "Nah, man. It's Alien Abductees Anonymous."
I thought I heard Sam snicker, but she was professional enough to cover it quickly.
"So, she's been abducted by aliens?" I asked, trying to keep the disbelief out of my voice.
"Look, I didn't marry my wife for her stunning intellect," Drake said. "What can I say? She's a ditz."
I shook my head. While I didn't know about the aliens thing, Jenna James couldn't be too dumb if she was effectively making a million dollars off a five-year investment. Wall Street had nothing on those kinds of returns.
"Well, we can certainly look into the matter and see what we can find," I said. "Check into her phone records, see who she might be spending time with, where she goes when she's not with you."
"Great." Drake nodded, his jowls lifting as his mouth attempted a smile. "I'll be back tomorrow morning for a full report."
"Tomorrow?" I glanced from Sam to Caleigh. They both wore frowns that mirrored my own thoughts. "Uh, Mr. Deadl—er, Drake, we're going to need a bit more time than that to thoroughly look into the matter. I mean, just doing background research alone is going to take us a good portion of the day."
But Drake shook his head. "There's three of you, right?"
"Well, yes, but—"
"So you background or whatever," he said, pointing to Caleigh, "and you just follow her." He pointed to Sam before turning his eyes on me. "And you put a rush on it and gimme a report tomorrow."
I silently searched for a delicate way to tell him that we couldn't very well put a rush on Mrs. Deadly's libido happening to carry her to a lover's arms.
"Look, I'm happy to give you a retainer for your services," Drake said, pulling a check from the fringed pocket of his leather vest. "Would this cover it?" He slid the paper along the table toward me.
I peeked at the amount and had to fight to cover my reaction. It had a couple more zeroes than I was used to working with.
I shot a glance at Sam.
She sent me a small shrug.
"Okay," I finally said. "We'll see what we can dig up."