by Barry Eisler
“I’m at the Grand Hyatt on Stockton. Meet me in the lobby in fifteen minutes.”
Ben was ambivalent about the suggestion. On the one hand, fifteen minutes wouldn’t give Hort time to set anything up. On the other hand, he never liked a face-to-face when someone else suggested the venue.
No. He needed to mix things up, give himself time to think, make sure he didn’t surrender the initiative.
“I’m south of you right now,” Ben said. “It’ll take me an hour to get there. Let’s make it ninety minutes to be sure.”
That would sound good to Hort. If Ben agreed to the place and was comfortable with a later time, it would mean he was feeling trustful. Although he very much wasn’t.
“All right. Ninety minutes.”
Ben clicked off. He looked at Osborne. Osborne kept his hands on the wheel.
“You knew about the inventor, right?” Ben said, his head beginning to throb again. “Hilzoy. You knew what happened to him.”
Osborne stared straight ahead. When he spoke, his voice was an octave higher than usual. “The police say he was killed in a drug deal.”
“Yes, that’s what the police thought, it’s what they were supposed to think, but I asked you what you fucking knew.”
Osborne didn’t answer. And that was answer enough.
His head throbbed harder. This piece of shit knew what it was about. He knew they were going to kill Alex. Which was the same as if he’d tried to kill Alex himself.
A part of him marveled at his own inconsistency. A couple of hours earlier, he’d wanted to kill Alex himself, had on some level longed to do it. But that was different. Alex was his brother. Maybe that was a paradox, maybe it was screwed up, but there it was.
He tried to think whether Osborne presented any further exposure. If taking him off the board would improve the state of play, he would do it. But he couldn’t think of anything. He didn’t know how to feel about that. Part of him wanted to do it anyway. And in fact, killing Osborne was exactly what he’d had mind when he’d forced him out to this deserted spot. But watching him grip the steering wheel, seeing and even smelling the man’s fear, he found himself reluctant. He’d killed a lot of people—in combat, in self-defense, in cold blood. But he’d never killed someone when it wasn’t sanctioned, or when it wasn’t necessary. He’d crossed a lot of lines over the course of his life, and he was surprised to realize he didn’t want to cross this one.
He looked at Osborne. “Get out of the car. Leave the door open.”
Osborne glanced back at him, his eyes pleading. “Don’t. Please don’t.”
“If that’s what I was going to do, asshole, I would have done it already. And you wouldn’t have seen it coming.”
They both got out. Osborne raised his hands in front of him, half plea, half stick-’em-up.
“Put your keys and your phone on the seat,” Ben said.
Osborne complied.
“Now move away from the car. You’ll be able to find it back in your parking lot. Have a nice walk.”
He drove back to Sullivan, Greenwald, parked the car, and got into his own. He wanted to trust Hort. He always had. It made him sick that now he had doubts.
But maybe there was a way out of this. Maybe things could be straightened out. If he could sit down with Hort, hear what he had to say … Maybe there was an explanation. Maybe he could call off the dogs. Maybe.
But he needed to make sure Alex was on board first.
29 STING
Sarah took a taxi from the hotel to her apartment in the Mission. She was exhausted and felt strangely numb. The night before, with Ben … it had been overwhelming. She didn’t know whether anything more could come of it, whether she even wanted anything more to come of it, but something had happened between them, and even in the midst of all the craziness, it had affected her profoundly. And then the next morning, he had walked out with about as much regard for her as for a comfortable chair he’d enjoyed sitting in. Because, what, he had a fight with his brother? That made her trash, to be just thrown away?
Or maybe the fight with Alex was just his excuse. She’d known he was damaged from the moment she met him, and she should never have done anything other than keep him at a sensible distance. She was as furious at herself for her ridiculous lapse of judgment as she was at Ben for treating her like she was some disposable thing.
Alex. She hadn’t meant to hurt him. She hadn’t even known she could. What was it going to be like now, when they saw each other in the office? Would he still want to work with her? Or would he blackball her somehow?
She realized the corporate and even the romantic concerns were mundane, probably her mind’s attempt to ignore the real difficulty she was in. Because the people who wanted Obsidian were still out there. If she was in danger before, most likely she still was. But she didn’t know what to do about it, so she was fretting about things that were far less consequential.
The cab stopped on Lexington Street in front of her apartment, a basement unit in one of the narrow, detached, tree-shaded houses that lined the street. She liked Lexington because it was only four blocks long and so attracted little traffic. Its sidewalks were menaced more by the Big Wheels and bicycles of the numerous children who lived in the neighborhood than they were by cars or trucks.
She paid the driver and got out. She’d been gone only, what, twenty-four hours? And yet the comfort and familiarity of the setting felt surreal to her.
She started up the flagstone walk toward the front door. A man called out from her right. “Excuse me, miss?”
She turned, surprised, because she hadn’t noticed anyone there when she’d gotten out of the cab. The surprise turned to alarm. What if they’d found out where she lived? Ben said it would be easy. Maybe they were waiting for her here.
But the man, a slim Asian in shades and a green fleece pullover, was keeping a respectful distance. He said, “If I wanted to get from here to San Jose, would I be better off taking 101, or 280?”
By reflex, her mind started working the problem, considering variables, imagining possibilities. “Well,” she said, “it would depend on where you’re going in San Jose.”
Something suddenly felt wrong to her. Why would a pedestrian ask a question like that?
Because of the way it’s calculated to momentarily engage your mind. It would distract you from—
Something stung her in the neck from behind. She clapped a hand to the spot and cried out. Something was stuck in her neck. She tried to turn, but strong hands gripped her shoulders. She struggled and the world seemed to lurch. From somewhere she heard a door—a van door?—slide open, and the last thing she saw before everything grayed out was the man in the sunglasses and fleece pullover moving quickly and purposefully toward her.
30 YOU ALWAYS HAVE
Alex was home in bed, but his eyes were wide open. Ordinarily, he wasn’t prone to napping, but he hadn’t slept at all at the hotel and he badly needed a few hours right now.
He’d walked all around the house looking for a sign of what had happened the night before. And he’d found it, in the backyard: the woodpile was knocked over, and a short distance away, the grass was trampled down and slick with something dark and sticky he immediately knew was blood. A trail of flattened grass led to the fence, and he imagined Ben dragging a body. It had really happened. Ben had really killed someone right in their backyard. The violence was done, but the signs of its occurrence terrified him. He’d restacked the woodpile and hosed down the bloody grass, imagining how he would explain it to Gamez when he was back in that windowless room for questioning. “Blood? I didn’t see any blood. The grass just needed watering. Sure, there are sprinklers, but I sometimes water it by hand.”
Finally, his exhaustion began to overwhelm his imagination. His eyes fluttered closed. He was in the backyard again, but he was a kid now, watching his dad water the garden. Katie was throwing a Frisbee to Arlo. A telephone was ringing somewhere …
He jerked awake. The phone. It wasn’t a dream. Shit
, he should have taken the damn thing off the hook. He picked up the handset. “Hello?”
“Alex, it’s me.”
Ben. A sickening surge of adrenaline coursed through him. He paused, then said, “Leave me alone.”
“Alex—”
He put the handset back in the receiver and lay back down. A second later, the phone rang again. He ignored it. After three more rings, it stopped.
The trick, he decided, was to treat Ben as dead. Not to hate him, not to resent him, but just to place him in the same part of his brain where he kept his memories of Mom and Dad and Katie. Maybe he could even grieve for him. Then he could accept the loss, get over it, and move on. That’s what he needed to do. Ben was dead. That was okay. That was good.
His agitation eased. His exhaustion rolled in again. He started to doze.
Someone pounded on the front door.
He sat bolt upright, total recall of that night in the bath flooding his mind.
“Alex!” he heard Ben call. “Alex!”
He thought about the gun Ben had given him. If he still had it, he might have shot through the front door.
He pulled a pillow over his head. He’s dead. This is a bad dream. He’s dead.
The pounding got louder. “Alex, open the goddamn door or I’ll shoot the lock out!” Ben shouted. “You want to explain to the neighbors? The Levins? The Andrews? Mrs. Selwyn?”
Christ. Alex got out of bed and threw on a robe. He walked down the stairs and stood in front of the door. “Go away,” he called loudly.
“Open the door.”
“No! I don’t want anything from you. Just go away!”
“Alex, I’m going to count to three and then I’m going to shoot the lock out. One.”
Good God, it was like when they were kids again. Except with guns.
“Two.”
“Okay, okay! Don’t shoot, you idiot.”
He opened the door, and damn if Ben didn’t have his gun out. There was a bandage on his head that gave Alex a surge of satisfaction. Ben put the gun back in its holster and walked in. Alex closed the door behind him.
Ben looked around. Alex realized he hadn’t been in the house in, what, eight years? Something like that.
“Looks the same,” Ben said. He sniffed, his expression contemplative. “Smells the same.”
“What do you mean it smells?”
“In a good way. It smells like …”
“Like what?”
Ben shrugged. “Like home.”
Alex almost said, Well, it’s not your home. Instead: “What do you want?”
Ben looked at him. “Your boss is involved in this.”
Alex almost laughed. “Osborne?”
“They blackmailed him. He was their inside man.”
“Good for you, Columbo. But it’s too late. I don’t even care. Just go.”
“Alex—”
“We’re done, remember? Seriously. Go.”
“You don’t understand.”
“No, I do. I’m on my own, and so are you. Just go. Just go, Ben. Get out of my house.”
He’d called it “my house” deliberately, but Ben seemed not to notice. “Alex, you need my help,” he said.
“No, I don’t need your help, I don’t want your help.”
“Yes, you do!” Ben shouted, spittle flying from his mouth. “Yes, you do, Alex, and you’re going to take my help! You’re going to listen to me, and if you don’t want my help then, fine. I’m not going to be responsible for any more deaths. You’re going to listen to what I have to say, you’re going to do what I tell you to do, and then if you don’t, it’s your fucking fault, you killed yourself, you committed suicide on your own and it wasn’t my fault! None of it!”
They stood staring at each other. Ben was panting, the muscles in his neck straining. “You think I don’t hurt?” he said. “You think I don’t wish I’d driven Katie home that night? Why do you want to torture me with that? You don’t think I’m tortured already? What do you want me to do, say I’m sorry? Beg for forgiveness? Set myself on fire? What do you fucking want?”
His voice cracked and he stopped. Then he spun and slammed his palm into the wall. Alex heard a huge crack! and felt the shock reverberate through the floorboards. A hole appeared in the wall, plaster dust drifting lazily out of it.
Ben stood like that, his shoulders bunched, his breath heaving in and out. Then he wiped an arm across his face and turned and looked at Alex. His eyes were red. “What do you want?” he said.
Alex looked at him. He couldn’t believe what he was seeing. Was Ben … was he crying?
“Why didn’t you just tell me?” Alex asked. “Why didn’t you ever … say something?”
“Because you blame me. You always have.”
Alex couldn’t deny the truth of that. And suddenly, he felt like the world’s biggest jerk. He hadn’t wanted Ben to be sorry. Or not just that, anyway. No, he’d wanted … he’d wanted to extract something from him. Punish him. Seeing Ben’s tears, seeing the undeniable evidence of his brother’s sorrow, made him realize that this was at least as much about himself as it was about Ben.
“Mom and Dad … they told me it wasn’t your fault.”
Ben laughed. “Yeah, they told me the same thing. But that’s not how they felt. And they were right. And so were you.”
“I don’t think I was right,” Alex said, surprised at the words. “I think … I don’t know.”
He’d almost said, I think I needed to blame someone. Was that it? He needed to think.
“And Dad,” Ben said. “I wish I’d done that differently. It felt like my whole life was going to get wasted, like if I didn’t enlist, the window would close or something. I look back and realize that was bullshit. I could have waited. I should have waited.”
Alex didn’t know what to say. He’d never felt so confused. “It … might not have made any difference,” he stammered after a moment. “I think Dad … what he did, maybe he was going to do it no matter what.”
Ben rubbed his temples. “Christ, I feel like I could sleep for a week.”
Alex smiled. “How’s your head?”
“It hurts. I wasn’t really expecting you to throw the gun at me. Shoot me, maybe, but not throw it.”
“It seemed like a good compromise at the time.”
“I guess it was.”
They were quiet for a moment. Alex said, “Osborne’s really involved in this?”
“He is. Let’s sit down and I’ll brief you.”
Alex sat at the kitchen table. Ben walked over to a cabinet, took out a glass, and filled it at the faucet. “You want one?” he asked. Alex shook his head, amazed at the familiarity of it. A simple thing like getting a glass of water.
Ben joined him and gave him an earful. They’d blackmailed Os-borne. Ben’s unit was involved. His commander was one of the people behind the whole thing.
“You’re going to meet him?” Alex asked. “How can you trust him? I mean, he’s been trying to kill me.”
“He might not have known you’re my brother.”
“You believe that?”
“I’m trying to find out.”
“If he had known, would it have made a difference?”
Ben sighed. “I don’t know. That’s one of the things I want to find out. I’m not going to meet where he wants, I’ll tell you that.”
“Where, then?”
“I’ll figure something out. Do me a favor, go somewhere else for a few hours while I’m gone.”
“Ben, I can’t live this way.”
“We’re trying to fix that, that’s the point. So you can go back to your life and not have to worry about someone coming after you.”
“I don’t know why you think you can trust this guy. I think meeting him is a mistake.”
“I’m not trusting him. I’m being very careful, believe me. But I’ll tell you what. You still have Obsidian and Hilzoy’s notes on your laptop, right?”
“Right.”
“G
o someplace and take the laptop with you. That’ll be a kind of insurance for me if things go sideways.”
“Ben, seriously, I don’t think this is a good idea. You’re as exhausted as I am, maybe you’re not thinking clearly.”
“Trust me, okay?”
“What about Sarah?”
For an instant, Ben’s expression was genuinely sorry. “You mean …”
“No, not that. Forget about that. Is she in danger?”
“No more than you, and probably less. But I doubt she’s going to listen to me right now.”
Alex sighed. “She’s probably not going to listen to me, either.”
There was a pause. Ben said, “I’m sorry, Alex.”
Alex shook his head. He’d acted like a jerk at the hotel. It wasn’t as though Sarah was his girlfriend. He’d never even had the courage to make a move on her, and he knew he never would. He’d just been jealous, that’s all. But he didn’t feel that way now.
“Are you sure this is a good idea?” he said.
Ben cracked his knuckles. “No. I just don’t see a better one. Go somewhere. Relax. I’ll call you in just a little while.”
Ben left and Alex started to get dressed. He wondered where he should go. Another hotel? He was sick of hotels. And hell, he was so tired he could probably just put his head down at the library for a few hours.
He wanted to believe Ben could make everything right, but he couldn’t. They’d killed two people for Obsidian. His own boss was part of it. They’d gotten into the patent office database, the law firm’s filing system. These weren’t the kind of people who could be talked out of what they were doing. Why did Ben think the fact that Alex was his brother was going to make any difference? It seemed more likely the connection would doom Ben than it would save Alex. Why couldn’t Ben see that? And why couldn’t Alex persuade him?
He pulled on a shirt and started pacing. Damn it, Ben was making a mistake. He thought about calling him and decided it would be useless. When Ben got an idea in his head, nobody could get it out.
He realized he was thinking only about what might happen to Ben. And then he realized something else: that’s all Ben wanted him to think about. He didn’t want Alex to be afraid for himself. He thought of the way Ben had led him gently from Katie’s hospital room so many years before and wondered how they’d gone so wrong.