“I knew it,” Juana’s mother said. “What kind of trouble? Tell us. We’ve been worried to death about . . .”
“Anita, please, no talk about death.” Pedro squinted toward Buchanan and repeated the question that his wife had asked. “What kind of trouble?”
“If I knew, I wouldn’t be here,” Buchanan said. “Last week, I received a message that she needed to see me. The message was vague, as if she didn’t want anyone else to read it and figure out what she was telling me. But I could figure it out. She desperately needed help. There’s a place in New Orleans that was special to us. Without mentioning it, she asked me—begged me, really—to meet her there at the same time and date we’d last been there. That would have been at eleven P.M. on Halloween. But she didn’t show up that night or the night after. Obviously, something’s wrong. That’s why I came here. Because you were the only people I could think of to try to establish contact with her. I figured that you of all people would have some idea what was going on.”
Neither Pedro nor Anita said anything.
Buchanan gave them time.
“No,” Anita said.
Buchanan gave them more time.
“We don’t know anything,” Anita said. “Except that we’ve been worried because she hasn’t been behaving normally.”
“How?”
“We haven’t heard from her in nine months. Usually, even when she’s on the road, she phones at least once a week. She did say she’d be away for a while. But nine months?”
“What does she do for a living?”
Pedro and Anita looked uncertain.
“You don’t know?”
“It’s something to do with security,” Pedro said.
“National security?”
“Private security. She has her own business here in San Antonio. But that’s as much as Juana told us. She never discussed specifics. She said that it wouldn’t be fair to her clients. She couldn’t violate their confidence.”
Good, Buchanan thought. She stayed a pro.
“All right,” he said, “so she hasn’t been in touch in nine months. And suddenly several men who claim to be old friends of hers show up to ask if you know where they can find her. What else isn’t—?”
Abruptly Buchanan noticed that Juana’s parents were looking at him differently. Their gaze was harder, more wary, their need to confess their concerns about their daughter now tempered by renewed suspicion about him. The risk he’d taken had finally caught up to him. His remark about the other men who’d come looking for her had prompted Juana’s parents to associate him with those men.
But he was troubled by something else. The intensity of his headache had made him temporarily relax his guard. If an enemy was trying to find Juana and if that enemy was impatient enough to send three different men to ask Juana’s parents about where she could be found, might not that enemy have gone further in an effort to learn what the parents knew? Might not that enemy have . . . ?
“Excuse me. May I use your bathroom?”
Pedro’s suspicion made him look surly. He nodded grudgingly. “It’s down the hall. The first door on the left.”
“Thank you.”
Buchanan stood, feigning self-consciousness, and went along the hallway. In the bathroom, which was bright, white, and extremely ordered, he locked the door, strained to get some urine from his bladder, flushed the toilet, and turned on the sink to wash his hands.
He left the water running, silently opened the medicine cabinet, found a nail file, and used it to unscrew the wall plate to the light switch. Taking care not to touch the wires, he unscrewed the switch from its cavity in the wall and pulled it out to study what was behind.
His discovery increased the nausea that his headache caused. A miniature microphone-transmitter was attached to the wires. Because most people felt that a bathroom gave them privacy, that was the room they’d least likely suspect had a bug, hence the first room that Buchanan always checked. And because Mrs. Mendez kept this bathroom scrupulously clean, about the only place in the room where she wouldn’t find a bug was behind the light switch, a spot favored by professional eavesdroppers. The phones were probably miked, as well.
Okay, Buchanan thought. Here we go.
He shut off the water, the sound of which he had hoped would conceal the noise he’d made when he unscrewed the wall plate. Now he unlocked the bathroom door and went back to the living room, where it was obvious that Juana’s parents had been whispering about him.
“Pedro, I apologize,” Buchanan said.
“For what?”
“When I was washing my hands in the bathroom, I must have pulled the sink plug’s lever too hard. It looks like I broke it. I can’t get the sink to drain, I’m sorry. I . . .”
Pedro stood, scowling, and strode toward the bathroom, his chest stuck out, his short legs moving powerfully.
Buchanan got ahead of him in the hallway and put a finger over his own lips to indicate that he wanted Pedro not to say anything. But when Pedro didn’t get the message and opened his mouth to ask what was going on, Buchanan had to put his hand firmly over Pedro’s mouth and shake his head strongly from side to side, mouthing in Spanish the quiet message, Shut up. Pedro looked startled. The house is bugged, Buchanan continued mouthing.
Pedro didn’t seem to understand. He struggled to remove Buchanan’s hand from his mouth. Buchanan responded by pressing his left hand against the back of Pedro’s head while at the same time he continued to keep his right hand over Pedro’s mouth. He forced Pedro into the bathroom and bent his head down so that Pedro could see behind the light switch that Buchanan had pulled from the wall. Pedro owned a string of car-repair shops. He had to be familiar with wiring. Surely Pedro would know enough about other types of wiring to realize that the small gadget behind the light switch shouldn’t be there, that the gadget was a miniature microphone-transmitter.
Pedro’s eyes widened.
Comprende? Buchanan mouthed.
Pedro nodded forcefully.
Buchanan released his grip on Pedro’s head and mouth.
Pedro wiped his mouth, which showed the strong impression of Buchanan’s hand, glared at Buchanan, and rattled the sink plug’s lever. “There. You see, it was nothing. You merely hadn’t pulled the lever far enough. The water’s gone now.”
“At least I didn’t break it,” Buchanan said.
Pedro had several pens and a notepad in the top pocket of his coveralls. Quickly, Buchanan removed the pad and one of the pens. He wrote: We can’t talk in the house. Where and when can we meet? Soon.
Pedro read the message, frowned, and wrote: 7:00 A.M. My shop at 1217 Loma Avenue.
“I do not trust you,” Pedro said abruptly.
“What?” The effect was so convincing that Buchanan took a moment before he realized that Pedro was acting.
“I want you out of my house.”
“But—”
“Get out.” Pedro grabbed Buchanan’s arm and tugged him along the hallway. “How much plainer can I make it? Out of my house.”
“Pedro!” Anita hurried from the living room into the hallway. “What are you doing? Maybe he can help us.”
“Out!” Pedro shoved Buchanan toward the front door.
Buchanan pretended to resist. “Why? I don’t understand. What did I do? A couple of minutes ago, we were talking about how to help Juana. Now all of a sudden . . .”
“There is something not right about you,” Pedro said. “There is something too convenient about you. I think that you are with the other men who came to look for Juana. I think that you are her enemy, not her friend. I think that I should never have spoken to you. Get out. Now. Before I call the police.”
Pedro unlocked the door and yanked it open.
“You’ve made a mistake,” Buchanan said.
“No, you did. And you will make a greater mistake if you ever come near my home again.”
“Damn it, if you don’t want my help . . .”
“I want you out!” P
edro shoved Buchanan.
Buchanan lurched outside, feeling exposed by the porch light above him. “Don’t touch me again.”
“Pedro!” Anita said.
“I don’t know where my daughter is, but if I did, I would never tell you!” Pedro told Buchanan.
“Then go to hell.”
6
“You’d better get here pronto,” Duncan Bradley said into his cellular phone while he listened to the transmission from the house. “Something about the guy who showed up definitely rubbed Mendez against the grain. Mendez thinks the guy’s with us. They’re yelling at each other. Mendez is kicking him out.”
“Almost there. Just two blocks away,” Duncan’s partner said through the cellular phone.
“You might as well be two miles away.” Duncan stared at the green magnified night-vision image on his closed-circuit television screen. “I can see the dude coming off the lawn toward his car. He’ll be gone before you get here.”
“I told you I’m close. Can you see my headlights?”
Duncan glanced at another screen that showed the murky area behind his van. “Affirmative.”
“Perfect. When he pulls away, I’ll be just another car on the road,” Tucker said. “He won’t think anything when he sees my lights behind him.”
“He’s getting in his car,” Duncan emphasized.
“No problem. The license number you gave me.”
“What about it?”
“I accessed the Louisiana motor-vehicles computer. The Taurus belongs to a New Orleans car-rental agency.”
“That doesn’t tell us much,” Duncan said.
“There’s more. I phoned the agency. Pretended to be a state trooper. Said there’d been an accident. Wanted to know who’d rented the car.”
“And?”
“Brendan Buchanan. That’s the name on the rental agreement.”
Tucker’s headlights loomed larger on the rear-view television screen.
On the front-view screen, two blocks away, the Taurus’s lights came on. The car pulled away.
With a flash, Tucker’s Jeep Cherokee passed the van. Duncan pivoted his gaze from the night-vision television image and smiled toward the front windshield and the swiftly receding taillights of Tucker’s Jeep.
“See, I told you,” Tucker said through the cellular phone. “No sweat. I’m on him. No headlights pulling away from the curb behind him. Nothing to make him suspicious.”
“Brendan Buchanan?” Duncan wondered. “Who the hell is Brendan Buchanan? And what’s his connection with the woman?”
“The head office is checking on him.” Tucker’s taillights diminished to red specks as he followed the even-more-minute specks of the Taurus. “Meantime, I’ll find out where he’s staying. We’ll pay him a visit. We’ll find out all we need to know about Brendan Buchanan.”
7
A microphone-transmitter required something to receive its broadcast. Depending on the strength of the transmitter, the receiver might be as far away as a mile. But practical considerations—static-producing electrical equipment in the area, for example—usually required that the receiver be much closer to the source. As well, it was useful for the person monitoring the reception to maintain visual surveillance on the target area. Thus the odds were, Buchanan concluded, that the receiver was in the neighborhood—possibly in a building, although in this respectable single-family-dwelling area it would have been difficult for a surveillance team to take over a house—more likely in a vehicle of some sort. But there weren’t any other cars parked on the street in this block. Buchanan had noticed that when he’d arrived, and he checked again as he crossed the lawn toward his rented car.
He turned to glare at Pedro Mendez, who continued to stand on his front porch, scowling at Buchanan.
Damned good, Pedro, Buchanan thought. You missed your calling. You could have been an actor.
Pretending to be furious, Buchanan spun toward his Taurus. As he rounded it to unlock the driver’s side, he glanced both ways along the street, and there it was, some kind of vehicle parked two blocks away. He hadn’t noticed it before because the vehicle, small down there, was in shadows between widely spaced streetlights. The only reason he noticed it now was that the headlights of an approaching car exposed it.
I think it’s time to pay somebody a visit, Buchanan thought as he started the Taurus, turned on its lights, and drove away. The headlights of the approaching car came up behind him, aggravating his headache.
Somebody wants to find Juana badly enough that they bug the house. But they still can’t be sure Juana didn’t get a message to her parents in a way that the microphones couldn’t detect, so whoever wants to find Juana becomes impatient and sends somebody around to the house to pretend they know Juana and ask where she is. No success. They send somebody else. Nothing. So they send yet another . . .
Does that make sense? Buchanan wondered. They must have realized that three old friends coming around in two weeks would make Juana’s parents suspicious. Then why would—?
Yes, Buchanan thought. If Juana is in touch with her parents, whoever is after her wants her to know that her parents are being watched. They want to make Juana nervous about her parents. They want to threaten her by implying a threat against her parents. They hope that’ll force her to come out of hiding.
And now that I showed up, now that the surveillance unit knows there’s a wild card, they might get nervous enough to stop being patient and have a long, forceful chat with Juana’s parents. I have to let Pedro and Anita know they’re in danger.
And what about me? Buchanan thought as he steered around a corner. Whoever’s after Juana will want to talk to a stranger who suddenly shows up and asks the same questions they did.
Buchanan steered around another corner.
The headlights behind him kept following.
My, my, Buchanan thought.
8
FALLS CHURCH, VIRGINIA
The colonel had chosen a motel on the edge of town, using a pay phone to reserve a room under a pseudonym. At 11:00 P.M., after he’d used an electronic scanner to make sure that the room was free of microphones, his three associates arrived, their clothes speckled with water from the dank November rain that had greeted them at Washington National Airport following their flight from New Orleans.
All of them looked tired, even Captain Weller, who normally exuded sexual vitality. Her blond hair looked stringy, her blouse wrinkled. She took off her jacket, slumped on the motel room’s sofa, and toed off her high-heeled shoes. Major Putnam and Alan had haggard red cheeks, presumably from fatigue combined with the dehydration that occurs on aircraft and the further dehydrating effect of alcohol.
“Can we get some coffee?” Captain Weller asked.
“Over there,” the colonel said flatly. “The carafe on the tray beside the phone.” In contrast with his visitors, the colonel looked fit and alert, standing as straight and attentively as ever. He’d shaved and showered before he’d arrived, partly to keep himself fresh, partly to appear more energized than his companions. His clothes, too, were fresh: shined Bally loafers, pressed gray slacks, a starched white shirt, a newly purchased red-striped tie, and a double-breasted blue blazer. The effect was to make his tall, trim body suggest the military, even though he did not wear military clothing.
“Oh.” Captain Weller glanced toward the carafe on the tray beside the phone. She and Major Putnam, who slumped on a chair beside the television, did not wear military clothing, either. “Right. I didn’t notice it when I came in.”
The colonel’s eyes narrowed as if to imply that she had been failing to notice a lot of things.
Alan, the only civilian in the room, loosened his rumpled tie, unbuttoned the top of his wrinkled shirt, and walked over to the coffee, pouring a cup. Everyone in the room looked surprised when he carried the cup over to Captain Weller and then returned to pour another cup, blowing steam from it, sipping. “What are we doing here? Couldn’t this have waited until the morning? I’m
dead on my feet, not to mention I’ve got a wife and kids who haven’t seen me in—”
The colonel’s flint-and-steel voice interrupted, “I want a thorough update. No more of your hints and guesses that you don’t feel comfortable talking about because you don’t trust the security of the phones.”
“Hey,” Alan said, “if we’d been given portable scramblers, I’d talk on phones all you wanted, but once burned, twice shy, Colonel. In this case, we need extra-tight security.”
“I couldn’t agree more.” The colonel stood straighter. Rain pelted against the window, making the dismal room even less agreeable. “That’s why I ordered you to be here right now instead of at home in bed with your wife.”
Alan’s expression hardened. “Ordered, Colonel?”
“Somebody tell me what’s going on.” The colonel’s voice became more flinty. “Major, you’ve been unusually silent so far.”
“A lot of it you already know.” The major rubbed the back of his neck. “In New Orleans, we went to meet Buchanan at his hotel room. The arrangement was to be there at nine hundred hours. He didn’t respond when we knocked. After we tried several times, we asked a maid to unlock the door. The day before, he’d been released from the hospital. Maybe he’d fainted or something. What we found was his room key, a signed checkout form—obviously he didn’t want the hotel to start a search for him—and this note addressed to Alan.”
The colonel took the note and scanned it.
“So he says he’s going to do us a favor by dropping out of sight. That way, he’s an invisible man, and the reporter from the Post can’t verify her story if she pursues it.”
“That seems to be the idea,” the major said.
“And how do you feel about this?” The colonel scowled.
“Hell, I don’t know,” the major said. “This is all out of hand. Everything’s so confused. Maybe he’s right.”
“Damn it, have you forgotten that you’re an officer in the United States Army?”
The major straightened with controlled indignation. “No, sir, I definitely have not.”
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