On that point, Gabriel and Quinn’s father were in agreement.
“It’s my job to track down criminals,” Quinn responded, her tone angry. “Sometimes it’s going to piss them off. I can handle myself.”
“Not against someone like Dupont,” Brendan said.
“Dupont is a dangerous man,” Mikel agreed. “That is why Quinn carries a gun, as well as having her own security detail.”
“Just tell him what you know,” Quinn said to her father.
Mikel leaned back in the chair, but a vibration of intense focus hummed in the air around him.
Quinn’s father set his glass on the coffee table before turning to Mikel. “You will use this information only to protect my daughter.” His voice sliced with a steel edge, and Brendan Pierson’s veneer of charm peeled away to show that he might be as dangerous as Mikel or Dupont.
So that’s where Quinn’s toughness came from.
“Your daughter will be protected. Do not doubt that,” Mikel said. “However, I will use—or not use—anything you tell me in whatever way I see fit. I will not compromise the investigation.”
For a long moment, the two men stared at each other. Brendan’s gaze blazed with anger. Mikel’s was ice-cold with control.
“Gléas,” Brendan muttered. Gabriel assumed that was an Irish insult, judging by Quinn’s reaction. “Dupont has a stolen Vermeer, the one taken in that robbery in Texas three years ago where the homeowner and his mistress ended up dead.”
Mikel nodded. “No one could understand why anyone would steal that painting. They could never sell it except to a private collector who didn’t care about the violence of its provenance.”
“Yeah, Dupont wanted the painting for himself. I’m told he considers himself a man of culture because he collects rare artworks. He ran the job himself,” Brendan said. “The owner was supposed to be with his wife on vacation in Bali, but he evidently wanted to spend time with his mistress, so he stayed home.” Brendan’s mouth twisted in a grimace. “That cost him a lot more than a divorce would have.”
Quinn gaped at her father. “How do you know all this?”
“Whiskey and high stakes at the poker table loosen tongues,” Brendan said. “Especially if a disgruntled former employee of Mr. Dupont is one of the cardplayers.”
Shame and disgust twisted the corners of Quinn’s lips, and she looked at the tile floor with embarrassment in every line of her body. Gabriel wanted to tell her that nothing her father did reflected on her, even as his suspicions about her father’s career deepened.
Mikel, on the other hand, vibrated with electric excitement. “Do you have some proof of Dupont’s involvement?”
“I have a witness,” Brendan said. “The local breaking-and-entering expert who got Dupont past the alarm system and into what he expected to be an empty house. He’s willing to cooperate in return for an immunity deal. He didn’t bargain for being an accessory to a double murder.” Brendan took a breath. “I also know where Dupont keeps the Vermeer. That’s a nice stack of evidence right there.”
Gabriel saw what Brendan was after. “You want Mikel to use his law enforcement contacts to put Dupont in prison for murder and theft.”
“You’re a bright lad,” Brendan said before he turned to Mikel. “I’ve got no credibility with the authorities, but you will know how to make sure Dupont is put away for a long time.”
“Just because he’s in prison doesn’t mean—” Quinn stopped and threw a sideways glance at Gabriel.
“Doesn’t mean he won’t send someone after you,” Gabriel finished for her. Mierda! If Quinn admitted to the problem, it was worse than he thought. Fear walked down his spine.
“Maybe too bright a lad,” Brendan said. “But prison would slow Dupont down quite a bit.”
Mikel was giving Quinn’s father a long, flat look. “I will want the witness’s information and the location of the painting.”
Brendan pulled a folded square of paper out of his shirt pocket and stretched to hand it to Mikel. The security chief unfolded it, read whatever was written there, and refolded it, holding the paper between his index and middle finger.
“Where is the painting?” Quinn asked.
“The fewer people who know the better,” Mikel said.
Gabriel caught Brendan’s nod of agreement.
“I will think about how best to use this information,” Mikel said, but he looked back at Quinn’s father with that same flat expression.
Quinn gave a small hiss of frustration. Gabriel felt for her dilemma. She was dealing with the father she had profound issues with and her boss whom she nearly idolized. Right now, the two men were in agreement about keeping the information from her, so she was forced to accept their decision.