Cut and Run

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Cut and Run Page 30

by Carla Neggers


  The aunt hadn’t slit his throat, which he had deserved to have slit for letting a goddamn seventy-year-old woman get in that kind of position over him. She’d only let him off because she wanted to be with her sister.

  The mother was protecting the daughter. Jesus, did it piss him off for forgetting how sentimental and dumb people could be about their relations. He had a brother; hadn’t seen him since before Vietnam. He hadn’t wanted to sign up. “I don’t believe in this war,” he’d said. Bloch felt a war was a war, and one was pretty much the same as another. When you were a soldier, you were paid to kill, not to think.

  Yeah, he thought with a spasmodic laugh, you leave the thinking up to idiots like Sam Ryder.

  The senator answered on the twelfth ring. Bloch kept count. “Knew it was me, didn’t you?” he said.

  He could hear Ryder’s fear just in the way he breathed. “What do you want?”

  “Juliana Fall.”

  “What?”

  “She has the diamond.”

  “That’s ridiculous, Sergeant, she’s a concert pianist! She knows nothing about diamonds, I’m sure. Why would she have it? Look, why don’t you just give it up? I’ll see what I can do about getting you some stop-gap funds to help you vacate the camp and start over elsewhere—”

  Bloch ignored him. “The Dutchman helped her get out yesterday. Sammy, Sammy, you’re not helping me. Why don’t you go and find out where she went.”

  “Sergeant, I can’t help you! Don’t you understand?”

  “Yeah, I do.” Bloch ate some more sunflower seeds. “I understand I’m sitting down here in your goddamn fishing camp with a couple tons of illegal weapons and ten men who probably ought to be in jail and how sweet that’d look splashed across the front page of every goddamn newspaper in this country.”

  Ryder coughed, spitting with anger, but that, Bloch knew, was the most he could ever do with his anger—just spit and sputter with it. Made a good politician, Sammy-boy did. “Where am I supposed to find Juliana Fall?”

  “Don’t whine, Lieutenant. You’ll think of something.”

  “Sergeant—”

  “And keep an eye out for Stark, let me know if he comes your way. I don’t like it that he’s messing around out there and I don’t know where he is. I’ve got a man at his house, but he hasn’t showed. You keep in touch, Lieutenant. And Sammy? I can use you in Washington.”

  Ryder sputtered, and Bloch laughed, hanging up.

  Then he got his number-two man into the office and told him to start packing up. “When I give the word,” he said, “I want to be able to abandon camp within thirty minutes.”

  “Will do,” his man said.

  Bloch grinned. Now that was what he liked to hear.

  Juliana had put on clothes—heavy corduroys, turtleneck wool sweater, socks, boots, deerskin gloves with her spare keys, and parka—before trying her car. It didn’t start. She didn’t know a damn thing about engines, but she opened up the hood anyway and had a look.

  She knew enough to spot pulled wires.

  “That bastard.”

  He’d made damn sure she couldn’t follow him—not that she had the slightest idea where he was. Going after Phillip Bloch, undoubtedly, but where was he? If she had a telephone, she’d call the police and have Matthew Stark arrested for stealing Shuji’s car. But she didn’t have a telephone. She couldn’t even call a damn garage to come fix her car.

  “Aunt Willie would say I’m soft,” she told herself aloud.

  Aunt Willie, she thought, would be right.

  Slamming the hood shut, she went inside for a scarf. Cashmere. It was softer on her neck and mouth. Then she went into the kitchen and looked on the pine shelf where she kept her jam recipes.

  The Minstrel’s Rough sat there collecting dust.

  Why hadn’t Matthew swiped it along with Shuji’s car?

  “Because,” she said, “he knows Bloch is going to get rid of everybody whether he gets the Minstrel or not.”

  Get rid of everybody. What a quaint little euphemism. Phillip Bloch would kill everybody whether or not he got the diamond. Matthew knew this, and so hadn’t bothered with it.

  But maybe she could use it as a bargaining chip, if not to make a deal, at least to buy some time—for her mother, her aunt, even for Matthew.

  She snatched up the huge rough, shoved it into her inner coat pocket, and headed back outside. Her head was pounding, and she was stiff and sore and hungry, but she trudged outside. The sun was blinding on the snow, and the wind had picked up; it was bitterly cold. Walking was difficult and, because she couldn’t see the patches of ice under the freshly fallen snow, treacherous. If she fell and broke a wrist or her hands got badly frostbitten, her career would be over.

  Some things, she told herself, you just had to chance.

  The nearest house was a mile down the road and belonged to a dairy farmer who brought her surplus tomatoes and summer squash during the summer and sometimes fresh, raw milk that tasted wonderfully unlike anything she’d ever bought in New York. His son was outside shoveling the walk. She explained her problem, and he put down his shovel and drove her back over to her place in his truck. He said it’d take some time to fix her Audi, he wasn’t used to working on foreign cars, would she like to ride someplace?

  “Yes, the airport, if possible. There’s—there’s been a family emergency.”

  “Albany?”

  She nodded. Albany was about forty miles away, but it had regular flights to New York—and probably Washington, too. She was thinking Washington might be her best bet. Senator Samuel Ryder, Jr., was a part of this mess. He was to have met Hendrik de Geer at Lincoln Center, she remembered from what Matthew had told her, and he had been in Vietnam with Bloch and Otis Raymond and Matthew Stark. Perhaps, with proper motivation, he could tell her where to find Phillip Bloch. She was ready to kick ass and take names; she’d give him proper motivation all right.

  “Albany’s fine,” she said.

  “Okay, get in.”

  Matthew spotted the skinny man who’d held the gun on Juliana sitting across from his townhouse in a rented Pontiac and had his cab drive around the block and back again, letting him off below his house. He’d left the Mercedes at the Albany airport and taken a flight to Washington, all very quick and clean. Discipline had helped him put Juliana Fall out of his mind. Helped him, he thought, but without a whole lot of success.

  The guy flipped to the sports section. Even at a distance, Matthew recognized the four-inch bold type of the Gazette. He might just be watching his place—or waiting for Matthew to return so he could take him out, although in that case he’d have expected to find him inside rather than out and sure as hell not reading the damn paper. Knowing Bloch as he did, Stark knew killing him wasn’t something the sergeant would want to delegate. He’d prefer to save the pleasure for himself.

  But best not to take chances.

  Taking the direct approach, Stark tore open the driver’s side door, grabbed the guy by his shoulder and wrist, and ripped him out of the car, shoving him down on the hood and twisting his arm behind his back. He’d left a Colt .45 on the console next to his Styrofoam mug of coffee. He was curly-haired, rail-thin, and probably twenty years younger. Stark felt like an old man.

  “You’re Bloch’s man?” Stark asked quietly.

  “No.”

  “Your orders?”

  A woman with a baby in backpack halted fifteen yards down the brick sidewalk, turned white, and quickly crossed to the other side of the street.

  Stark jerked the guy up and slammed the car door shut with him. “Talk.”

  “Bloch’ll kill me—”

  “Bloch isn’t here. I am.”

  “Jesus Christ, I knew I didn’t want this job. Look, man, I’m just supposed to keep an eye on the house, ’case you or the girl shows. If I’d known that was her yesterday—” He seemed to realize it wasn’t a good idea to finish his thought and shut up.

  The girl. Juliana. Not a girl, he thought,
remembering last night. “Then what?”

  “She shows, I grab her—not hurt her, okay? Man, I got special orders not to hurt her, so you don’t have to worry about that. You I’m supposed to report back where you go, what you do, stuff like that, take you out if I can but not get killed trying to do it. I been warned about you. I mean, Weaze—”

  “Weaze’s got a big mouth.”

  “Yeah, right.”

  Stark could see the kid idolized Otis Raymond. Weaze must love that, he thought, and loosened up his grip. “What’s your name?”

  “Kovak. Roger Kovak.”

  “You’re a stupid shit, Roger Kovak. Weasel and Bloch go back to a day before you were even born. Weaze has got an excuse for being dumb. You don’t. You want excitement, go climb Mount Everest. All Bloch’s going to do for you is get you killed or jailed.”

  Roger Kovak looked terrified. He was the kind of kid, Stark thought, who would have gone to Vietnam thinking he was going to come home John Wayne and found out way too late all he was going to do was come home dead. Matthew opened up the car door. He got out the Colt, then shoved Roger Kovak back in the front seat and left him there with his newspaper and his cup of cold coffee. He could call Bloch if he wanted. Stark didn’t care.

  Bloch already knew he was coming.

  The Pontiac roared to a start and screeched down the street. Stark didn’t even glance back as he went inside. His house was toasty warm. He remembered his cold walk down Juliana Fall’s steep stairs, how warm it was under the stack of quilts with her, warmer, he thought, than he’d ever been. She shows, I grab her. He wondered if leaving her in the middle of goddamn nowhere with a disabled car and no telephone had convinced her to stay the hell out. Something cold and empty inside him told him it hadn’t.

  He tucked the Colt in his waistband and headed upstairs, where he got out the SIG-Sauer P-226 9mm automatic he kept around because he knew people like Phillip Bloch. He strapped on the hip holster and then put on his leather jacket and went back downstairs. He didn’t feel good, and he didn’t feel confident. He just felt armed.

  The light was blinking on his message machine. He pressed the button and played back the messages. There were two. One was from a buddy who wanted him to go to the Caps game that night. The other was from Alice Feldon.

  “Otis Raymond is dead,” she said. “Call me.”

  Twenty-Two

  Sam Ryder settled back in the leather chair at his desk, with his back to the half-smiling, half-knowing face of his father. He had come to his office because it seemed the right place to be—cushioned from men like Phillip Bloch, Hendrik de Geer, Matthew Stark. Here process was important. The rule of law. There wasn’t just power here, but tradition, and when his footsteps echoed in the wide corridors, he felt himself a part of that tradition, not just of his father, but of the men before him. The United States Senate. This, he thought, is where I belong.

  But Phil Bloch and Matthew Stark were trying to pull him back to the central highlands of Vietnam, to a time and place where he didn’t belong. Had never belonged. He had done his duty, and more. It was over. Finished. If Bloch and Stark couldn’t accept that, then so be it.

  Bloch would eliminate Hendrik de Geer. Then he and Stark would eliminate each other. It was the only way, and it had to work. Otherwise they would all be there forever, hovering in the shadows with their accusing eyes, their knowledge, and their threats.

  One of his aides, also working on this chilly December Saturday, announced that Juliana Fall was there to see him.

  Ryder shot forward in his chair. Juliana! But how? Why? She had the diamond, Bloch had said. Find out where she went.

  She’s come here, Bloch, you stinking slob, he thought. She’s come here to me. I didn’t have to go looking.

  He told his aide to send her in at once.

  Juliana rushed in, pushing back her hair as she said breathlessly, “Senator Ryder, thank you for seeing me.”

  He nodded, unable to speak. If possible, she was even more beautiful now. He was stricken by her look of vulnerability; her pale face made her eyes seem even darker, more hauntingly beautiful.

  “I hope you’ll be willing to help me,” she went on, obviously agitated. “I—I need to find Phillip Bloch.”

  “Juliana…” Her name came out as a whisper, a breath, and he was on his feet, unsteadily moving toward her. No, not her! She can’t be involved in this! He took her arm. “Here, sit down.”

  She pulled away, more assertively than he would have anticipated from someone of her background. Her dark, beautiful eyes riveted on his. “Please don’t tell me you don’t know what I’m talking about because I know you do.”

  “Don’t be silly. But, of course, if I can help you—”

  “Tell me where Bloch is!”

  “I haven’t the slightest idea,” he said, cool and patrician, wanting desperately to touch her and kiss away her fears, but disturbed by the aggressiveness she was exhibiting. Had he misjudged her? There was no reason for her to be involved—why was she? “Sergeant Bloch was my platoon sergeant in Vietnam, but that was twenty years ago.”

  “You were at Lincoln Center with Rachel Stein. She’d learned of your involvement with de Geer and was trying to get you to bring him to justice for his betrayal of her and her family and my family to the Nazis during World War Two.” Juliana paused, no longer gulping for air but regarding him with a cold, determined eye. “That alone, Senator Ryder, ought to interest the Post of the Gazette or any number of news organizations. Once they start to dig—”

  “Don’t threaten me,” he said icily, despising the willfulness he now saw in her delicate face. Beautiful, yes, and vulnerable too, but also tough. Inappropriately tough, in his judgment.

  She choked back her frustration. “Do you want me to plead? Help me, for God’s sake!”

  “You’re not the woman I thought.”

  His words were simple and pained, but Juliana seemed unmoved by the sadness and disillusionment he felt. She’d destroyed his image of her, the woman he’d thought he could love. They’d spent only minutes together, but he’d sensed she possessed the level of sensitivity and femininity he’d found lacking in most women. She’d failed him.

  “We hardly know each other, Senator, but that’s not the issue. Please help me.”

  “What do you plan to do once you locate Bloch?” he asked, trying to sound disinterested. Did she have the Minstrel?

  “I can’t explain.”

  She did. Dear God, she did!

  “Senator, where is he? I mean what I say. I’ll take everything to the press if you don’t help me. Don’t you see? I don’t know what else to do!”

  Ryder shuddered with indecisiveness. From long, terrible experience he knew Bloch didn’t make deals. If Juliana tried to exchange the Minstrel for her mother and her aunt, he would take it and get rid of all of them. He’ll kill them—say it. But not necessarily. There was no reason she should be hurt, provided Stark and Bloch got to each other first.

  “I don’t want anything to happen to you,” he said.

  “Thank you, I don’t either, but some things you just have to do.”

  Yes, he thought, that’s right. If he sent Juliana down, Bloch would look upon Ryder favorably, and, should things not work out by some chance, that would be helpful. But why shouldn’t things work out? Telling her Bloch’s location wasn’t putting her into any more danger than she was already in. No matter what he did or didn’t do, Bloch would catch up with her. This way, he was giving her the advantage. That was how he had to look at it.

  “He’s taken over my fishing camp on the western edge of the Dead Lakes. It wasn’t my idea. I had no knowledge of what he was doing—he presented me with a fait accompli.”

  Juliana obviously didn’t care about his problems. “Where are the Dead Lakes?”

  He hesitated.

  “Tell me, dammit!”

  “Fly into Tallahassee,” he said stiffly, pretending it was someone else doing the talking, as he did w
hen he had to leak information to the press about confidential Senate matters, as he had twenty years ago when he’d told Bloch that he wanted Matthew Stark and his crew to fly into their LZ. “You can rent a car and drive out there. Stop at a gas station or a grocery. Anyone can tell you where the camp is.”

  Bloch’s men had shoved Wilhelmina and Catharina into a one-room shack with a small three-quarter bath and kitchen facilities that consisted of a sink, a two-burner heating unit, and a small portable refrigerator, which was empty. The shower was mildewed. The walls were rough boards, uninsulated, and the damp, chilly wind off the lake blew in through the cracks. There was no heat. For furniture there was a studio bed, a couch that pulled out into a bed, a vinyl-covered La-Z-Boy, a small table covered with a red-checkered vinyl cloth and two folding wooden chairs. The back exit was securely locked. The front entrance was guarded by a man in a khaki shirt and trousers who’d told the women to get some sleep.

  They’d taken turns dozing on the studio bed, only because they were older than they’d once been. Forty or fifty years ago, Wilhelmina thought, nothing could have made her sleep. At ten o’clock, the guard had brought them a repulsive meal of plain yogurt, granola, and grapefruit juice. Wilhelmina had reminded herself of the days of eating tulip bulbs and fodder beets; she was surprised to see that her sister didn’t seem to mind the food. They’d done what they could to splint her arm, binding it with a handtowel, but it needed proper tending. Catharina never complained, although she had to be in agony.

  Now they were both up, Catharina posted at the front window overlooking the strange, dark lake, Wilhelmina posted at the side window looking out at the cypress trees laden with what her sister told her was Spanish moss. Beyond was a handsome rustic lodge made of rough uncut pine. A screened porch ran its entire length, and a well-kept gravel walkway led to a boathouse and dock. The helicopter pad where they’d landed was a good distance behind the lodge, but exactly how far was difficult to say. Wilhelmina had still been so preoccupied with the terrible ride and her sister’s pain that she didn’t trust her sense of distance.

 

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