Hell and Gone

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Hell and Gone Page 21

by Duane Swierczynski


  Weary like him.

  Look at you.

  Unruly hair, grown out from a buzz cut. Reddened eyes, dry lips, the skin looking like it had been shrink-wrapped to his skull.

  Hardie reached out and touched the glass, on the off chance that it wasn’t a real mirror. Maybe it was a carnival’s trick mirror, installed here to amuse the tourists. Cold, hard glass beneath his fingers. Cold, hard skull beneath his skin.

  Hardie had no idea how long he’d been out, how much time the memory shot had taken away, or even how long he’d spent down in that prison. But surely it couldn’t have been long enough to do this to him.

  “How are you doing, handsome?” he said softly.

  Hardie had three names, thanks to Bobby Marchione:

  Doyle.

  Gedney.

  Abrams.

  Hardie would have to pay them a visit to discuss his recent employment. Not alone; he needed Deke at his side. That’s what he should do first. Call Deke, tell him that he was alive, that the crazy beautiful missing-persons expert he’d hired had completed the job after all. And, more important, Deke needed to send a small army of feds to raid that damned place, rescue the sorry bastards trapped down there before—the first shot in the larger war.

  Hardie looked down at his ripped, dirty, bloodied suit. He walked over and caught his reflection in the glass of a tourist information booth. He looked like a crazy homeless man who’d somehow managed to camp out on the island. He had no ID. He probably stank, too, although it was hard to tell, thanks to the relentless odor of mildew and cold rock in his nasal cavity. So it would probably be a little tricky, introducing himself to some poor tourist and asking to borrow his cell.

  Instead, Hardie wandered into a crowd until he found one to steal.

  Not a proud moment, but too bad. He saw a black-onyx slab sticking out of the top of a blue leather Coach purse. Hardie figured the woman could afford to replace it easily enough. He’d make it up to her later. Send her flowers.

  The snatch was easy; just a bump then a lift. He slid the phone into his trouser pocket and went off to the holding area, where people sat on dark gray metal benches waiting for the next ferry back to San Francisco. Tourists cleared a spot for him as he approached.

  Hardie pulled the phone out of his pocket and tried to look for the On button.

  He couldn’t find it.

  What kind of phone was this, anyway?

  He didn’t recognize the brand name, nor did he see any buttons that made rational sense. Come on. Had Hardie been locked up for so long that they went and changed all the cell phones already?

  At long last his trembling fingers tripped something and the screen lit up. A green bar appeared on the screen, with a tiny lock icon at the end of it. Hardie touched the lock. The phone gave off a small annoyed shudder; the screen bounced. But nothing unlocked. Come on, already. Why did he have to steal the phone of a paranoid who locks it? There was no way to enter a PIN or anything. Hardie jabbed a thumb at the screen. A tiny shudder; a screen bounce; nothing else. The irony was not lost on him. He’d just managed to escape a super-secret inescapable prison facility; now he was having trouble getting past the pixelated image of a lock on a goddamned cell phone.

  There was a teenage girl sitting on the bench. Hardie looked at her, cleared his throat.

  “Uh, my phone is locked. You know how to unlock it, by chance?”

  The girl’s eyes crawled over in Hardie’s vague direction, assessed him in a second, then returned to their original position. Thin white wires hung down from her ears.

  “Don’t worry about it,” Hardie said. “I’ll figure it out.”

  After a few more stabs and shudders, Hardie started sliding his fingers around the screen, as though he were trying to massage it to life. The green bar moved! But then the lock appeared again. He slid the bar and held it open, wondering if that would do the trick. No. The lock reappeared. Someday he was going to laugh about this. Not now, but someday. Maybe. Sitting in Deke’s backyard, watching him grill. So there was this one time I escaped from a secret prison but I couldn’t call for help because…get this…the green bar wouldn’t stay open! Isn’t that a scream!

  At long last he figured it out: you had to slide the bar over, then linger for a second until the phone unlocked. There. Done. But now came a new problem: where were the numbers on the phone? After some more faffing about, Hardie’s thumb found a handset icon, and when he touched it a nine-digit keypad popped up on the screen.

  The main number came back to him almost instantly. Hardie listened to the automated welcome message, then thumbed the zero and asked the operator to transfer him to Agent Deacon Clark’s office.

  “I’m sorry, he’s no longer with the agency. Can I direct your call to someone else in the agency?”

  “What? No…Where did he go?”

  “Let me direct your call to another agent.”

  “Hang on…”

  Hardie’s mind went cold and panicked. If Deke was no longer with the FBI, did that mean that Kendra and Charlie, Jr., no longer had FBI protection? He tried to think of the names of Deke’s colleagues and came up with one.

  “Can you transfer me to Agent Jim Glackin?”

  “I’m sorry, he’s no longer with the agency. Let me direct you to—”

  Hardie interrupted. “Who’s in charge of the joint FBI–Philly PD task force?”

  “Transferring you now.”

  An agent whose name he didn’t recognize—some Agent Wilkowski—told him that he wasn’t available, but if he would leave his name and number, he’d get right back to him, or he could e-mail him at…

  No, no e-mail.

  God, Kendra and Charlie…

  Beep.

  “I’m calling for Agent Deke Clark, and it’s extremely important I reach him right away. My name is Charlie Hardie. I used to work with your task force a couple of years ago. If you can have Deke call me back immediately, I’d…”

  The phone was stolen; he didn’t know what number to leave. But this was the FBI. He probably wouldn’t have to. The number would pop up on caller ID instantly.

  “Just have Deke call me immediately.”

  Hardie ended the call, slid the phone back into his pocket, and looked out onto the gloomy bay. The ferryboat was approaching. His journey back across the River Styx. He felt his heart racing. Too much sensory detail to absorb. Too many people holding too many things. Phones and cameralike gadgets he didn’t recognize. Designer names that sounded like parodies, the kind they’d run in Mad magazine. That’s what you get when you put yourself in exile for a few years, he supposed, then ended up cooling your heels in a secret prison.

  He wandered over to the entrance to the ferry walkway, wondering how he was going to pull off this little scam. He hadn’t come here as a tourist; he had no ticket. Somehow he’d have to slip back onto that boat.

  He glanced at the information on the board, announcing new events and tours at Alcatraz for the coming season. Glimpsed the dates idly, wondering what month it was.

  According to the coming-events flyer, it was almost August. Typical cold San Francisco summer weather.

  But then he happened upon the year.

  Hardie blinked.

  It…

  …it couldn’t be.

  28

  What we’ll be calling on is good old-fashioned blunt-force trauma. Horsepower. Heavy-duty, cast-iron, pile-drivin’ punches that will have to hurt so much they’ll rattle his ancestors.

  —Tony Burton, Rocky Balboa

  Philadelphia—Now

  DEKE WAS MAKING deviled eggs when the FBI called.

  Ellie was crazy about deviled eggs at picnics. But she couldn’t make them. Correction: of course she knew how to make them. Wasn’t nothing to them. Boil the eggs until hard, halve ’em lengthwise, scoop out the yolks, mix ’em with a little dry mustard, mayonnaise, and seasonings, then scoop the filling back into the white rubbery shells.

  But if Ellie made them, for some reas
on, she couldn’t properly enjoy them. Weird, sure. But Deke didn’t care. Because if something this easy was enough to make his woman happy, especially the way he’d been behaving, then he’d boil eggs all day long. He took two teaspoons and started scooping the yellow deviled part into the hollow inside the white halves. He was halfway through when his younger daughter yelled, “Dad!” and told him his cell was going off.

  He recognized the name right away.

  “Wilkowski? What’s up, man?”

  Deke may have left the department, but he kept his hand in. He was teaching criminal justice, and it helped to be able to draw on a pool of guest speakers. Wilkowski was one of them.

  “Got an interesting call a little while ago,” Wilkowski said.

  “Yeah? Interesting how?”

  “You holding on to something steady?”

  They’d traced the call to a cell phone in San Francisco. Deke packed a bag—his habit of having a go bag ready was long forgotten. He hadn’t stayed anywhere without his family in what…five years? Ellie always packed, so there was no need to think about it these days.

  But he didn’t think about the right kind of clothes for San Francisco in August as much as whether he’d need a gun or not.

  Deke’s own, purchased the day after he left the bureau, was locked in a box at the bottom of his closest. Just in case somebody showed up one day to make trouble for him, or to follow through on a threat. Deke fished the key out of his side-table drawer, kneeled down in the bottom of the closet.

  Charlie Hardie, do you see what you have me doing?

  His former colleague had asked: “You think it’s him?”

  “Play me the message,” Deke had said.

  Wilkowski did.

  Deke listened to it, felt his blood literally chill in his veins and the tips of his fingers tingle.

  After a while and a dry swallow he said, “No. That doesn’t sound like him.”

  “Well, we’re going to have someone out there follow up.”

  “Probably a smart idea,” Deke said. “Let me know what you hear.” Already rehearsing in his mind what he was going to tell Ellie.

  Goddamn—where have you been, Charlie?

  And how did you get out?

  29

  Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.

  —Popular 1960s expression

  FIVE YEARS.

  He’d been gone five years.

  No; scratch that—

  They had stolen five years from him.

  The Industry.

  Secret America.

  The Accident People.

  Who-the-fuck-ever.

  FIVE YEARS

  in white-hot neon, burning the gray pulp of his brain.

  Hardie himself had thrown away two years during his time in self-imposed exile as a house sitter. Now…add five more to that? Seven years total? He thought about Charlie, Jr. How old would he be now? Once, he’d read that over the course of seven years every cell in your body dies and is replaced. Every seven years you are a different person, physically.

  Five years stolen, seven years total.

  Five fucking years.

  Mann had tried to tell him, hadn’t she? In her own way, she’d tried. Water under a very old bridge.

  Five fucking…

  The men responsible?

  The men who had stolen a chunk of his life?

  Three names:

  Gedney.

  Doyle.

  And Abrams.

  Or to put it another way:

  Gedney, Doyle & Abrams.

  Not just three names, but a law firm. Somehow Hardie was able to use the Web browser on “his” phone to look it up. Downtown, right off Market Street. In the Flood Building, not far from the corner of Market and Powell.

  Hardie was standing there now. Watching from a Muni bench across the street, pretending to be homeless.

  (Pretending? Dude, you are homeless.)

  He’d done his homework. Five minutes on a public-library computer revealed jack shit; but Nate Parish had taught him how to dig deeper. Hardie found their faces in a local legal newsletter, in a photo taken at a glitzy bash. All three of them. He memorized their features, staring at them long enough to burn the newsprint into his mind’s eye. The men were not quite what Hardie expected.

  That didn’t matter, though. He posted himself outside. Waited. This part of Market Street was busy with shoppers, tourists, buskers. The cable-car turntable was down here. Everybody paid attention to that, not so much to him. Which was good.

  Years ago, while on a case with Nate Parish, Hardie had hung out in the Kensington section of Philly, dressed as a homeless man, trying to catch a serial strangler-rapist. Kensington was where they’d filmed much of Rocky. The neighborhood was struggling back in the 1970s; more than thirty years later, it was in a virtual death grip. After streetwalkers started turning up dead, the neighborhood accused the cops of doing nothing. Nate wondered about that. So Hardie told Kendra he’d be gone for two weeks and went undercover. He learned how to blend in, where to scrounge clothes, where to get soup handouts, fresh needles, the whole nine. In the end Hardie cornered the strangler and had to restrain himself from breaking the scumbag’s head. The strangler turned out to be a deputy district attorney—one who’d been on local television news that very afternoon calling for the strangler’s immediate capture and prosecution. Which Nate had suspected all along. Don’t ask Hardie how. All he knew was that after he’d spent two weeks on the street, Kendra refused to go near him until at least a dozen showers later.

  Hardie used those same street skills now—in San Francisco.

  Nate, you’d be proud of me. I can still act like a bum.

  I can still stalk powerful men who prey on the weak.

  Hardie saw Doyle pop out of the Flood Building first. The impulse was strong to walk across the street and just tear the man apart, rip entire chunks of flesh from his skeleton. But Hardie took a deep breath, willed his blood to cool, waited. He had to do this right.

  Gedney was next, the short prick. Two on his checklist. All he needed was the third—Abrams.

  Hardie quickly learned Gedney’s and Doyle’s comings and goings. Gedney stayed close to the Market Street office except for occasional jaunts to the St. Francis Hotel a few blocks up the street, where he would visit his usual suite. Doyle was more predictable. Almost every day he spent five to six hours at a garage down by the Embarcadero.

  Abrams, though—a constant no-show.

  The clock was ticking. If they knew what happened down in site 7734, they weren’t letting on. Presumably Eve got out, along with the rest of them. Eve, preparing to go to war with her army of heroes. The quiet couldn’t last forever, though; soon, Eve would strike her first blow. Any day now Gedney, Doyle, and Abrams could disappear.

  Hardie decided to start with Gedney and Doyle.

  He’d kill one, make the other lead him to Abrams.

  Hardie strolled into the ornate marble lobby, hung a quick right at the oversize grandfather clock, and made his way toward the elevators. To the casual observer he looked presentable enough. Jacket, thrift-store shirt, no tie. He was also reasonably sure that security would be preoccupied, what with the fire and everything behind the hotel.

  The fire he’d set just a few minutes ago, using three road flares he’d picked up from an unguarded construction vehicle on Market Street and a whole lot of trash stored in an alley beside the hotel.

  Hardie saw a wood-paneled restaurant in the lobby. It was the dead zone between lunch and dinner; nothing save a red velvet rope guarded the place. Hardie slipped past it and snatched up a steak knife from a serving tray, then left just as quickly to catch an elevator.

  The hallways up here were wide enough to park cars along one side while still leaving a lane free for traffic. He passed wide, vertigo-inducing windows that looked out upon the newer wing of the hotel across the way. Gedney’s suite, of course, would be facing Union Square. Only the best for the captains of the
Industry.

  Hardie braced himself for maybe a stray security guard or two disguised as a member of the hotel staff, but there wasn’t a soul in sight.

  He didn’t go through the pretense of knocking; there was no time for his wire-hanger trick, either. He used his good arm to balance himself as his good foot slammed into the space to the immediate left of the key-card reader.

  Gedney was perched on one of the two beds inside, watching a movie on a flat-screen TV. He was fully dressed in a gray suit, with a tie and everything, only he had kicked off his shoes and socks. Which struck Hardie as a strange way to relax. Why didn’t the man loosen his tie? Hardie kick-slammed the door shut behind him, then closed the distance between him and Gedney. He put the tip of the steak knife under Gedney’s chin. Gedney wore a blank expression. Not even mildly curious, as if he’d been expecting such a thing to happen.

  “Where have I been for five years?”

  Gedney inched up cautiously on the bed but said nothing. His eyes narrowed.

  “Did you hear me? Where the fuck have I been?”

  “Please don’t take what I’m about to say as a sign of disrespect, because that’s not what I’m intending. But who are you?”

  “Charlie Hardie.”

  Gedney seemed to search his memory bank for a few moments. His eyes drifted away from Hardie, as if the answer were on the next bed.

  “Did you FUCKING hear me?”

  Then Gedney exhaled slightly. “Of course I remember, Mr. Hardie. Unkillable Chuck, isn’t that what they used to call you? I liked that. I enjoyed the stories about you.”

  “Five years.”

  “It has been a long time.”

  “I have no problem chopping your head off.”

  “I believe you, Mr. Hardie. I really do. And a man in your position—well, I can’t say I blame you. But you have it all wrong. They could have flushed you down the toilet right then, like a goldfish. But I had a feeling about you. I knew you were talented, and could be useful to us. You still can. Let’s talk.”

 

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