(ooc--okay, so, yeah, i'm writing monsterously long posts. sorry 'bout that! i guess i'm just really having a good time.
)
Jack's drinking hadn't gone unnoticed, and Michael had noticed that it had been increasing. But he loved Jack, so he was only keeping an eye on it from a distance. When it came to how much alcohol she was drinking, he understood. He knew his could get out of hand if he didn't constantly work to keep it in check. He'd never become dependent on it, but he knew it took ridiculous amounts to make him blotto. His tolerance was probably too high, part of the consequence of living hard, of the brute survival needs in his lifelong business of walking the line between crime and law enforcement. Doing sinful things for saintly reasons could mess with his head when he let it.
He swirled the alcohol in his glass and watched the light sparkle through the amber. As a lover of art, he loved the play of light and color, and he liked how light liked to dilute his darkness, tickling decency out of what others found shameful. He didn't know if his 50+ years of friendship with Robert would survive this, particularly if they didn't stop Alete. To stop her this time, he would need to pull out every stop. And with Maddie gone, he didn't relish now what he had to do with the only lover left that still could accept not just the saint in him but the devil too. He would have to stop her once and for all--whatever that took.
That was his job, for awhile yet anyway. This, what Alete had done, was no less criminal and in some ways a great deal more, than what Audriana Swan had done. Michael knew he would have to kill Swan if he couldn't stop her. He couldn't treat Alete any differently if he couldn't stop her either. He groaned, frustrated.
"What the hell have I done?" he was restless and starting to pace, wanting to swiftly shut down the emotion that wanted to take hold of him. This wasn't the time. He didn't want to take Jack in this. He'd always wanted to protect her, to keep the ugly things of this world away from her, and here he was dragging her into the darkest part of his worst personal nightmare. She didn't deserve that, and yet, here she was. Still here.
"Well, offhand,..." he said, with a bit of dark humor, desperate to shut away some of his own emotional pain before he found himself spilling it all to her, all the agony of losing his wife, his child, his--what was she anyway--old flame, was that what she was? Betrayed every way but loose, except by Jack. And now, to right himself, he tossed his friendship with Robert into the pot right along with everything else.
"Offhand, I'd say some lockpicks, some dementor kibbles, a lobotomy so I don't need to think anymore..." He glanced at the glass of whiskey in his hand, lobotomy in a glass. Close enough. He let his voice trail off, knowing that if Robert had to contain him in Azkaban, he'd know to go to extraordinary lengths to keep him there.
"No, seriously, in any other time she'd be already back at my...our...her ...the house," he stumbled over what to call the beach cottage in southern France that was just as much home to him as the cottage in Hogsmeade. Forty years it had been a home to him, a safehaven and a place to run to when he was hunted. Forty years she'd been his companion, his collegue, his confidante, his lover, and had wanted to be his wife. The only thing that had kept that from happening was his allergy to altars. It surely hadn't ever been because of a lack of feeling for her on his part. She had been the only woman he'd ever seriously considered marrying for love. To sever that bond so completely had seemed so impossible and heinous when Robert had suggested it last year. To his own dismay, the fire had never quite quit burning even after he'd married Maddie. Now, it was over. It had to be. He had no choice. He slugged the drink quickly, snatched up the bottle, poured himself a third and set the bottle back down in front of Jack. He'd been loving Alete before Jack had even been born.
"She won't be doing that tonight," he said hoarsely, mainly from nearly choking on the whiskey. "She's got a buyer. And a damned rich one. Alete has expensive tastes and so do I. If she's got one she thinks will keep us for the rest of our lives, she's about to make the biggest score of her career. And, since I've covered her screw ups these last years, Alete still has a reputation of being one of the best." He added softly, partly to hear his own reasons in his own ears. "In our work? To lose her hands? To lose her touch? Its the worst that can happen to us. And she'd already lost me to Maddie. I wanted to leave her something, Jack."
Focus, Tremaine, he told himself.
Work now, think later.
"One question keeps nagging at me," he said, back on task, "Who? Who has that much money? Who is that desperate to want that sort of government information that they'd seek her out, be willing and able to pay that sort of money? Who the hell would that be, and what would they want it for? That sort of money has all sorts of power written all over it. If that alone doesn't give us pause us, we shouldn't be going on this.
"There's a far greater chance that when she turns the documents to the buyer, he'll kill her and keep the money. And, she knows it. But, she's done her homework, I promise. She knows whether this guy has the ability to pay her cost. Something has made her think she can pull it off.
"And, then there's the small business of what happens to England when that information is turned back against us.
"Before we run out of time, we have to figure out who the buyer is and get there in time to either stop her, or stop them both, and get the papers. We have to get the papers. The only thing I can bring to the table at the moment is trying to think like she does. Beyond that, I got nothin'."