Murdoch’s frown is becoming perennial, though it’s not totally directed at Malcolm.
“Neal Caffrey provides an excellent target for emotional manipulation. Trouble background, criminal father, tenuous social connections that—by all accounts—don’t have a great deal of regard for him or his well-being. An associate informed me that behind closed doors the FBI’s brass refers to him as ‘their number one asset.’” A pause. “Someone lonely with that kind of value to law enforcement is a very promising potential target.”
"You don't say," Malcolm observes flatly. "Tell me more about troubled people with rare talents and criminal fathers."
It's rhetorical and he doesn't wait for Murdoch to answer. He leans forward slightly.
"Mr Caffrey has a considerably less tenuous social connection now. He's in good hands. Rebeccachel won't be manipulating him. So where else might she look for what she wants?"
That takes Murdoch aback slightly. A moment later, though, it clicks, and he relaxes into a relieved kind of understanding.
“Ah. You and Mr Caffrey are romantically involved. Significantly so. My apologies.” It also opens up new avenues of inquiry, which heightens his own interest again. “How long has that been going on? In an official capacity? You said he and Miss Turner were nearly involved prior to your acquaintance?”
“When he thought she was Ms Lowe, yes. Bullet dodged, huh?” Malcolm watches him carefully, fidgeting with his cup. “She would have broken him without a care,” he says softly. “So what are you going to do about her?”
It isn’t hard to summon the indignance for that subject. They need to both solve this case and survive it to free Neal from the FBI’s tether afterwards.
“She would have,” Murdoch confirms. “Whether she would have left him broken as a marker of her handiwork or tied him off as a loose end will remain a fortunate unknown.”
He leans forward, having decided that Malcolm’s relationship with Neal makes the former more than academically helpful. “I don’t think she was at that museum to case it. Not as such. And she was not fired by anyone on staff for whom she actually worked.”
“Not exactly. Her dismissal paperwork is all very well organized, perfectly documented and filed. But no one can identify the signature on the supervisory lines, and no one wants to admit it.”
“She forged her dismissal. Neal is famous for forgery, too. So what does she need yet another forger for?” Malcolm asks curiously, pulling the file towards him to flip through it.
Murdoch puts a hand out to still Malcolm’s perusal, drawing out a different file.
It’s a lot thicker.
“The forgery was Hagen’s work. That’s my belief. She’s very smart and very skilled, but she’s also not an artist.”
He offers Malcolm the file. “None of this is officially confirmed. I can’t get anyone else to take an interest in the case. But I have reason to believe that Rachel Turner is an American-born former agent of MI5, discharged for treason, who then escaped custody and has been at large as a mercenary for a significant length of time since.”
“There are too many possibilities to do more than guess at that just now.” He makes an airy little gesture, like he’s shooing away an annoying bug. “The significant thing is that she believes she can get what she needs from Caffrey. She has something she thinks she can use to force his hand.”
“Personal leverage of some kind? Isn’t that what their relationship was supposed to be?” Malcolm muses. “So she’s a spy and a thug, not a forger or a thief. You think she needs both and Neal is both without Hagen.”
Malcolm looks at him warily, turning his coffee cup around in his hands, eyes flitting from Murdoch’s face to the file and back.
“What if he has to do something illegal to reel her in? Steal something or con someone? She’ll want him to prove that she has him before she gives him anything useful to us. He’s on thin ice and a short leash with the FBI and I can tell you from experience that they are not understanding about mitigating circumstances.”
“You’ve read my file,” Malcolm tells him. “And I’m sure you’ve read Neal’s and the saga of the longest ever maximum security sentence to indentured servitude ever handed out for first offence bond forgery.”
“Which is why an inter-agency operation would provide good external leverage for his release.” Murdoch says it with a neutral tone, but Malcolm might recognize the very calm and careful way he’s being watched. If he ever saw himself during interrogations, anyway.
“The FBI will never let him go with any pretence to hold on to him,” Malcolm says evenly. “And if he has to do things that will compromise him with them to help you, then he can’t help you.”
Murdoch is back to being a different team again. Malcolm is guarded again. The FBI is danger to Neal as far as he’s concerned. There’s no deal to be had that includes them.
Murdoch sits back a little, sure he’s missing something but not sure quite what. Not yet anyway. “Very well, the FBI doesn’t need to be involved. Interpol has independent interest in Rachel Turner in any case.”
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“Neal Caffrey provides an excellent target for emotional manipulation. Trouble background, criminal father, tenuous social connections that—by all accounts—don’t have a great deal of regard for him or his well-being. An associate informed me that behind closed doors the FBI’s brass refers to him as ‘their number one asset.’” A pause. “Someone lonely with that kind of value to law enforcement is a very promising potential target.”
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It's rhetorical and he doesn't wait for Murdoch to answer. He leans forward slightly.
"Mr Caffrey has a considerably less tenuous social connection now. He's in good hands. Rebeccachel won't be manipulating him. So where else might she look for what she wants?"
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“Ah. You and Mr Caffrey are romantically involved. Significantly so. My apologies.” It also opens up new avenues of inquiry, which heightens his own interest again. “How long has that been going on? In an official capacity? You said he and Miss Turner were nearly involved prior to your acquaintance?”
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It isn’t hard to summon the indignance for that subject. They need to both solve this case and survive it to free Neal from the FBI’s tether afterwards.
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He leans forward, having decided that Malcolm’s relationship with Neal makes the former more than academically helpful. “I don’t think she was at that museum to case it. Not as such. And she was not fired by anyone on staff for whom she actually worked.”
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His whole face is bright with that revelation.
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It’s a lot thicker.
“The forgery was Hagen’s work. That’s my belief. She’s very smart and very skilled, but she’s also not an artist.”
He offers Malcolm the file. “None of this is officially confirmed. I can’t get anyone else to take an interest in the case. But I have reason to believe that Rachel Turner is an American-born former agent of MI5, discharged for treason, who then escaped custody and has been at large as a mercenary for a significant length of time since.”
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“What if he has to do something illegal to reel her in? Steal something or con someone? She’ll want him to prove that she has him before she gives him anything useful to us. He’s on thin ice and a short leash with the FBI and I can tell you from experience that they are not understanding about mitigating circumstances.”
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Murdoch is back to being a different team again. Malcolm is guarded again. The FBI is danger to Neal as far as he’s concerned. There’s no deal to be had that includes them.
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Murdoch’s team of Murdoch. That’s fine. That’s ideal, really.
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