Gibbs's command to 'bring them all' was still ringing in Tony's head as he finished dropping off the Kahale kids in the conference room. Their father was waiting for questioning.
The elevator dinged, signaling Ziva's and Gibbs's arrival. They lead Patricia Kahale in, Ziva taking point and escorting her to interrogation.
Tony walked next to Gibbs to report. "One in interrogation, the rest in the conference room."
Gibbs nodded and glanced around the bullpen. "Where are they?"
The long Island Agents. "Uh, don't know, Boss. They weren't here when we came back."
Gibbs lifted an eyebrow but stayed silent.
"So, how do you want to do this, Boss?"
"Let's start with the father."
Tony snatched the case file as they passed his desk. Then, not because he had an urge to share his current opinion, Tony said, "And the evil step-mother?"
"Let her stew."
"Right, Boss. How about the kids?"
"Have McGee bring them down. He's in charge of any incoming calls."
"Right." Tony started for the center stairs.
"Hey!" Gibbs called out. "You're with me. Write to him or something."
Tony frowned as he followed Gibbs. Although interrogation was way more fun than dealing with McProbie and the kids, Tony was uncomfortable that Gibbs wanted him to send a postcard through the building.
"Write to him?"
"Through your phone," Gibbs said.
"Oh! Er, you mean send a text."
Gibbs stopped in his tracks. Tony cringed. "I'm writing to him, Boss."
Gibbs continued on, leading them to the interrogation wing and pushed open a door even though he was never told in which room the man was being held in. Tony shuddered. The Gind. What power it beholds.
"Hey, what's going on?" Johnathan Kahale questioned as they entered. "You said this was about my son? What's going on with the investigation?"
"Mr. Kahale," Tony said, "This is Special Agent Gibbs."
"Hi," Kahale said and after a brief hesitation, held his hand out. Gibbs shook in greeting.
"So, you are also on Michael's case? I had only met two other agents before being picked up by Agent David and Agent DiNozzo here. I didn't realize how big your teams are."
"Yeah," Gibbs chuckled, "I'm getting that a lot recently."
"Oh," Kahale said, unsurely. Tony understood. He would have said the same thing to that.
"So, how long is this going to take? With the kids here, I should really speak to my wife."
"Your wife is also here, Mr. Kahale," Tony said.
"Really? Can I please see her?"
"No," Gibbs said.
"What? Why not?"
"You are both suspects," Gibbs said.
"Excuse me?! I don't know how you came to that conclusion, Agent Gibbs, but I assure you that neither of us had anything to do with my son's death."
"Then I'm sure you can account for your whereabouts during that time," Tony said.
"I was home."
"Asleep?" Gibbs asked.
"Yes."
"Your wife?"
"Right beside me."
"Did you know about Michael's presence in the area?" Tony asked.
"It's like I told the other agents. No."
"And your wife?" Gibbs asked.
"No."
Gibbs reached into the case file and placed a sheet down.
"Explain," Gibbs said.
"I don't understand," Kahale said. "Are these my phone records?"
"Yeah," Tony said, "There were three calls during the night. One of which you made. You called Michael."
"How do you know it was Michael? It could've been anyone."
"Like who?" Tony asked. "Who would you call at one in the morning that used a number that magically disappeared after use?"
There was a couple of 'um's and 'well's as Kahale fished for an answer. And Gibbs was able to fill in Kahale's awkward moment. "Adrian Rodriguez."
Johnathan Kahale blinked. "Who?"
"Don't know him?" Tony said, hoping to get any sort of recognition, although it was apparent the name was meaningless to the man. "First Lieutenant Adrian Rodriguez. He was assigned to the same ship as your son. He used the same technique Michael used. Make a call. Dump the phone. You have quite the phone history. Remarkably, so do the First Lieutenant's parents. In fact, most of the calls you received from out of service numbers align perfectly with the First Lieutenant's folks. Gap lengths and all. Same day. Same hour. Same location."
Kahale sighed heavily. "It was Michael."
"Why'd you call him?" Gibbs asked.
"Wanted to set up a place to meet?" Tony suggested. "A place to kill him?"
"No! Never!"
"So why lie about contacting him?" Tony asked. "Was it your wife? She doesn't like him. That much is obvious. So what? Keep it hidden? Keep the son you had with another woman a little secret?"
"Michael wasn't some dirty secret!"
"He went missing," Gibbs said.
"Yeah," Tony said, adding some interpretation to that topic. "Why did he run away?"
Kahale shifted in his seat. "He didn't run away," he said. But his posture displayed the doubt he had. Interesting. If he had communicated with his son, shouldn't he have known the answer to that?
Gibbs opened the file again and placed down pictures of Michael's body in autopsy. He also placed down Ducky's official report. "He had tissue and muscle scars old enough to have been done before he disappeared," Gibbs said.
Kahale's eyes flashed up at Gibbs. "You imply that he had ever been beaten in my home, Agent Gibbs?"
"He was different," Tony said, hoping to diffuse the situation and redirect some of the clear revulsion from Kahale onto himself. "No pictures. No social life. Behavioral problems. No steady school. Mother doesn't exist. Who was she? Just some random chick?"
"She wasn't random. And she wasn't just some chick. She was intelligent. Exquisite. Knowledgeable about every subject. Well-travelled. Skilled beyond measure. She knew me before I even laid eyes on her. She's a goddess. And I fell for her, even knowing the consequences."
Wow. Tony might be jealous if his partner lit up like that about a previous flame that had no records. Not to mention, bringing a kid into the picture.
"I loved his mother. I still do. No matter how much she may now despise me. And I love Michael. I could never blame him for any of the things he brought with him. How could I blame him?"
'Blame him?'
"What happened?" Gibbs asked.
"Why'd he leave?" Tony said.
Kahale let out a breath. "He wanted to find his mother's relatives."
"Is she dead?" Tony asked.
Kahale shrugged. How helpful.
"You didn't know where they were?" Gibbs asked.
"No."
"So, what," Tony said, wrapping his head around this idea. "You just let a ten-year-old kid travel the country? Unsupervised? Alone? With not a clue where to go?"
"It wasn't planned," Kahale said, "He didn't say anything; he just left."
"But," Tony dragged the vowel out. "You were okay with his disappearance?"
The silence was the confirmation.
This was crazy! Who would do that? No, scratch that. Tony knew the answer to that. But these people just didn't fit that profile. This guy had to be lying. He was just following the given story, hoping that it would pan out.
"Well," Tony said, "that would explain why a couple of lawyers sent a missing person file knowing nothing would happen."
"Get someone to review his statements," Gibbs said, packing up the case file. "You're not charged with murder yet, but you will be charged with a list of other crimes."
Tony flung the door out dramatically. "Yeah, like child neglect."
Gibbs walked out, and Tony started to close the door, slowing down so it wouldn't close too fast. He waited for Kahale to plea. To bargain. To let loose.
But he didn't. And Tony had to eventually close the door. The click as empty as the amount of nothing they had gotten from that interrogation.
-Ζήβα-
Ziva sat on the corner of the table as Gibbs took up his spot on the chair.
Patricia Kahale sat on the other chair; hands folded and eyes pointed straight at the one-way viewing glass. She had remained silent on the car ride over. Interestingly enough, she had not requested a lawyer even though promising she would when last questioned.
Gibbs placed down the profiles of the two children, Jeremy Swallar and Natasha Hibashira.
"Last time you were here," Gibbs started, "You told me you did not recognize them."
Gibbs waited for a reaction. Mrs. Kahale did not so much as avert her gaze.
"Mrs. Kahale?" Ziva asked. 'If this is how it's going to be, we might as well just cut-'
"Who's on the other side?"
Ziva blinked, forced out of her thoughts.
"Another agent," Gibbs said.
"One of yours?"
"Yes."
"No one else?"
"No, just my guy."
"Good."
Ziva remembered how Mrs. Kahale reacted to Agent La Rue and seemed to dislike Agent Jackson. Did she know something they did not?
Gibbs tapped on the pictures. "You said you didn't know them."
Mrs. Kahale glanced at them. "I did."
"You lied."
"A mistake, surely."
"You were seen talking to them at a bar," Ziva said.
"What did you say to them?" Gibbs asked.
"I didn't say anything to them," Kahale stated. "Besides, aren't they a little young to be at a bar unaccompanied?"
"Who said they were unaccompanied?" Ziva asked.
"Was that not what you implied? Why would I talk to them, if they had their parents with them?"
Ziva had to hand it to Kahale. She could dance. Ziva gave her a little smile. If only just.
"They were looking for a ride," Ziva said, "We believe you suggested them to go to Tarsibo. He is your client, after all."
"I did not speak to them."
"You don't want to talk about them. Fine," Gibbs said, "How about we talk about your stepson. You haven't seen him for years?"
"No."
"You haven't spoken to him?"
"No."
"Your husband was," Gibbs said.
"N-" Mrs. Kahale stopped and threw them a questioning look. "If he was, I have no knowledge of that."
Ziva frowned. "So, you did not know that your husband was in regular contact with Michael?"
"No."
"Did you know your husband called him, right before he died?" Ziva asked.
"No."
"You told me you didn't know he joined the Marines. Did you not know what happened to him? That he was even alive? Did you not care? Your husband never told you anything, and you never asked?"
"No," Mrs. Kahale said.
Ziva leaned back. One word for all of her questions. She was used to it, but Gibbs at least cared.
"I suppose it was his way of respecting my desire to not be a part of it," Mrs. Kahale said. She scoffed. "His way of shielding me from that side of his life."
"His ex-wife," Gibbs clarified.
"She was never his wife," Mrs. Kahale said.
Gibbs shrugged. "Your husband had a kid with her. He speaks very highly of her. I would understand if you were resentful."
Mrs. Kahale glared at him. "I don't hate her, Agents," she said, "But if she's so smart, why does she make so many rash decisions? I'll tell you why. Selfishness. Pride. She doesn't have to deal with the consequences of her actions. Someone else always deals with them."
Ziva raised an eyebrow. Yes. Definitely resentful.
"Sounds like you know her," Gibbs said.
"No. But I've heard plenty of stories."
"What kind of stories?" Ziva asked.
"Dramas."
Gibbs hummed. "You would describe them as tragedies?"
Mrs. Kahale lifted her chin. "I would."
"Like the epic stories of the Greek myths," Gibbs said.
Mrs. Kahale said nothing.
"Your husband said she was a goddess. So, was he a part of some cult?"
Mrs. Kahale kept silent.
Ziva narrowed her eyes. The woman obviously did not like whatever it was her husband and this mystery woman was a part of. Why keep silent?
"You can tell us what's going on," Ziva said, "We will help you. Why don't you say anything? Are you being threatened? Your children are here and safe."
Mrs. Kahale swallowed. "It's nothing like that."
Oh, but it was. There was a response at the indication of being threatened and her kids, just as clear as to when Gibbs mentioned Greek myths.
"The kids," Gibbs said, tapping the pictures. "How do they fit in this?"
The woman looked down and took a breath, collecting herself. Ziva sat back. 'Just when we were making progress.' Were they looking at this wrong? Were the kids simply an unrelated event?
Patricia gave an annoyed huff. "As I already told you-"
The files flew from the desk. Gibbs was frustrated. Ziva did not envy this woman. He slammed his hands on the table, glaring down at her. "Then tell me something new. And make it the truth."
No. Ziva did not envy this woman at all.
The door clicked open.
Gibbs turned his death glare at McGee.
"Um, B-Boss," he stammered, "you really need to know this."
Ziva quickly followed after Gibbs. Although apparently suicidal, McGee was still a dear friend, and Ziva wouldn't like to see Gibbs murder him.
Gibbs growled. "What."
McGee nervously wet his lips.
"Well, Ducky has already released his findings. All these reporters who were following the case got them and reported the info to their respective medias. Reshaun Sachs, the bartender; you knew that of course- well know, you haven't forgotten. Well, he decided to find out what was going on since his business is obviously involved and-"
Oh no. McGee was rambling. And Gibbs's face was darkening with each word. Would her gun be helpful? Or perhaps her knife would be more practical. She decided on simply clearing her throat. Loudly. McGee stuttered to a stop. Ziva gave him a pointed look.
Ziva was relieved when she saw his face alight with understanding.
"Patricia Kahale was at The Drowsy Owl during the time of death. She could not have killed Staff Sergeant Michael Kahale."
-Αντηονψ-
Tony did not like this.
He watched as Gibbs and Ziva entered the interrogation room.
"You are free to go, Mr. Kahale," Ziva said.
"Thank you. If I can just see my wife, then we can-"
"Your wife isn't cleared," Gibbs said.
"What?"
"She admitted to killing your son."
"What?! No! She couldn't have."
"How do you know?" Ziva said, clicking the door shut behind her.
"She was at home."
"Weren't you home as well?"
"Yes, but- she just couldn't have done it."
"We know," Gibbs said, taking a seat. "Although not in your house, she is witnessed being at a bar during the time of the murder."
"Then you know she didn't do it. That she's innocent."
"Mr. Kahale, aren't you curious as to why she would be at a bar so late at night?" Ziva asked. "Not telling you and lying that she was?"
"Maybe she was meeting with her friends. I trust my wife."
"Have any idea as to whom these friends might be?" Gibbs said.
"No, I did not see them."
"What did they tell you?"
"Nothing. As I said. I did not see them."
"But you spoke with them. You received a call before and after you spoke with Michael. A blocked number."
"You had to be awake to answer your phone. You had to have known your wife was not lying asleep next to you. Why did you lie?"
"No, I-"
"Did you follow her?" Ziva said.
"Were you at your house?" Gibbs asked.
"Ye-"
"We have your kids here," Ziva said, "We can ask them."
"How about you ask them?" Gibbs said.
"Stop, please-"
"Maybe," Gibbs said, "you can tell them why you killed their brother."
"THEY HAD HER!" Mr. Kahale screamed. "They had Patty! And they were going to kill her! Unless…unless…"
"Unless you killed Michael," Ziva finished for him.
A gasp broke Tony's attention away from the interrogation room to the reason he was placed behind the glass. Patricia Kahale stood next to him with her hands over her mouth, staring intently at the scene before her.
"I warned him. I called him. They gave me a car and a bullet. I needed to save my wife. I wanted him to help me. But he said there was no time and that there was no one in D.C. that could help."
He bowed his head. "They had my wife," he sobbed.
"No," Patricia whispered.
"She's not part of this life," Mr. Kahale said, "She shouldn't die from it. How could I have brought her into it?"
"No," Patricia said again, and the look in her eyes gave Tony a bad feeling. "John, no!"
Tony was a half-second too late. The woman ran out of the viewing room. Tony sped out after her to see her flinging the interrogation room open.
"How could you do it?!" She cried.
"Boss," Tony said, "I'm sorry she just…" He stopped as Gibbs held a hand up.
"I'm sorry," Mr. Kahale said, "But I couldn't let you be involved. I couldn't let them have you! And you came back home and didn't say anything, acting fine-"
"I was always involved! Michael's stench led them to our family even after he left. They threatened to take me, you, our kids. They told me what they did to people."
"You took up a deal," Gibbs said, "You help them get what they wanted, they leave you alone."
Mrs. Kahale nodded.
"How many are there?"
"Too many. It's a nest that has grown through some sort of pact between them all and nothing is killing them."
"Why didn't you call the police?" Ziva asked her.
"That would just make things worse. Besides, Michael has obviously delivered a message to his people."
Gibbs froze for a second.
"Boss," Tony asked. What was going on?
Gibbs snapped out of it. "You two," he told the Kahales, "Stay."
He stalked out of the room. Ziva and Tony followed, having to jog to keep up with him. Tony quickly texted McGee a heads up and to send the Kahale kids back upstairs. When Gibbs took the stairs, they knew whatever he figured out was bad.
"McGee!" Gibbs barked. "Search the Long Island team."
"But I already- okay," McGee easily complied after looking at his boss, "Looking up Lima."
McGee shared his screen on the plasma as he loaded up the federal database.
"No," Gibbs said, "Not Lima. Don't go through any federal sites."
"Um, okay? Doing an internet search of Percy Jackson."
"News sites," Gibbs said.
"Boss there are hundreds of Percy Jacksons," McGee scrolling through articles, "We'll never find-"
"That one," Gibbs pointed.
It was an article from a few years ago. "Percy Jackson, Criminal or Victim?" The photo had an image of a young, disheveled Percy Jackson. And by his side…
McGee was freaking out. "Boss, I'm sorry. Their profiles should have-"
"Her," Gibbs pointed, "Age her up to now."
"Right. Aging."
McGee cut out the photo of the blonde and plugged it into the program. He had wisely shut his trap. As the image began to come into focus, Tony felt his heart stop. There was no denying it.
"Gibbs," Ziva said, quietly, "That's-"
BANG! Gibbs slammed his desk drawer closed and shoved his firearm in its place at his hip. There was utter silence in the bullpen as Gibbs strode off.
A few seconds later, Tony was the first to move. No matter how angry Gibbs was, Tony was still a cop. The rest of his teammates quickly followed.
They left the image of Annabeth Chase, otherwise known as NCIS Special Agent Anne Lima, on the screen behind them.